ANNALS OF THE PARISH
Or The Chronicle of Dalmailing during the ministry of the Rev Micah
Balwhidder Written by himself and arranged and edited by John Galt
INTRODUCTION
In the same year and on the same day of the same month that his Sacred Majesty King George the third of the name came to his crown and kingdom I was placed and settled as the minister of Dalmailing 1 When about a week thereafter this was known in the parish it was thought a wonderful thing and everybody spoke of me and the new king as united in our trusts and temporalities marvelling how the same should come to pass and thinking the hand of Providence was in it and that surely we were preordained to fade and flourish in fellowship together which has really been the case for in the same season that his Most Excellent Majesty as he was very properly styled in the proclamations for the general fasts and thanksgivings was set by as a precious vessel which had received a crack or a flaw and could only be serviceable in the way of an ornament I was obliged by reason of age and the growing infirmities of my recollection to consent to the earnest entreaties of the Session and to accept of Mr Amos to be my helper I was long reluctant to do so but the great respect that my people had for me and the love that I bore towards them over and above the sign that was given to me in the removal of the royal candlestick from its place worked upon my heart and understanding and I could not stand out So on the last Sabbath of the year 1810 I preached my last sermon and it was a moving discourse There were few dry eyes in the kirk that day for I had been with the aged from the beginning—the young considered me as their natural pastor—and my bidding them all farewell was as when of old among the heathen an idol was taken away by the hands of the enemy
At the close of the worship and before the blessing I addressed them in a fatherly manner and although the kirk was fuller than ever I saw it before the fall of a pin might have been heard—at the conclusion there was a sobbing and much sorrow I said
My dear friends I have now finished my work among you for ever I have often spoken to you from this place the words of truth and holiness and had it been in poor frail human nature to practise the advice and counselling that I have given in this pulpit to you there would not need to be any cause for sorrow on this occasion— the close and latter end of my ministry But nevertheless I have no reason to complain and it will be my duty to testify in that place where I hope we are all one day to meet again that I found you a docile and a tractable flock far more than at first I could have expected There are among you still a few but with grey heads and feeble hands now that can remember the great opposition that was made to my placing and the stout part they themselves took in the burly because I was appointed by the patron but they have lived to see the error of their way and to know that preaching is the smallest portion of the duties of a faithful minister I may not my dear friends have applied my talent in the pulpit so effectually as perhaps I might have done considering the gifts that it pleased God to give me in that way and the education that I had in the Orthodox University of Glasgow as it was in the time of my youth nor can I say that in the works of peacemaking and charity I have done all that I should have done But I have done my best studying no interest but the good that was to rise according to the faith in Christ Jesus
To my young friends I would as a parting word say look to the lives and conversation of your parents—they were plain honest and devout Christians fearing God and honouring the King They believed the Bible was the word of God and when they practised its precepts they found by the good that came from them that it was truly so They bore in mind the tribulation and persecution of their forefathers for righteousness sake and were thankful for the quiet and protection of the government in their day and generation Their land was tilled with industry and they ate the bread of carefulness with a contented spirit and verily they had the reward of welldoing even in this world for they beheld on all sides the blessing of God upon the nation and the tree growing and the plough going where the banner of the oppressor was planted of old and the warhorse trampled in the blood of martyrs Reflect on this my young friends and know that the best part of a Christians duty in this world of much evil is to thole and suffer with resignation as lang as it is possible for human nature to do I do not counsel passive obedience that is a doctrine that the Church of Scotland can never abide but the divine right of resistance which in the days of her trouble she so bravely asserted against popish and prelatic usurpations was never resorted to till the attempt was made to remove the ark of the tabernacle from her I therefore counsel you my young friends not to lend your ears to those that trumpet forth their hypothetical politics but to believe that the laws of the land are administered with a good intent till in your own homes and dwellings ye feel the presence of the oppressor—then and not till then are ye free to gird your loins for battle—and woe to him and woe to the land where that is come to if the sword be sheathed till the wrong be redressed
As for you my old companions many changes have we seen in our day but the change that we ourselves are soon to undergo will be the greatest of all We have seen our bairns grow to manhood—we have seen the beauty of youth pass away—we have felt our backs become unable for the burthen and our right hand forget its cunning—Our eyes have become dim and our heads grey—we are now tottering with short and feckless steps towards the grave and some that should have been here this day are bedrid lying as it were at the gates of death like Lazarus at the threshold of the rich mans door full of ails and sores and having no enjoyment but in the hope that is in hereafter What can I say to you but farewell Our work is done—we are weary and worn out and in need of rest— may the rest of the blessed be our portion—and in the sleep that all must sleep beneath the cold blanket of the kirkyard grass and on that clay pillow where we must shortly lay our heads may we have pleasant dreams till we are awakened to partake of the everlasting banquet of the saints in glory
When I had finished there was for some time a great solemnity throughout the kirk and before giving the blessing I sat down to compose myself for my heart was big and my spirit oppressed with sadness
As I left the pulpit all the elders stood on the steps to hand me down and the tear was in every eye and they helped me into the sessionhouse but I could not speak to them nor them to me Then Mr Dalziel who was always a composed and sedate man said a few words of prayer and I was comforted therewith and rose to go home to the manse but in the churchyard all the congregation was assembled young and old and they made a lane for me to the back yett that opened into the mansegarden—Some of them put out their hands and touched me as I passed followed by the elders and some of them wept It was as if I was passing away and to be no more— verily it was the reward of my ministry—a faithful account of which year by year I now sit down in the evening of my days to make up to the end that I may bear witness to the work of a beneficent Providence even in the narrow sphere of my parish and the concerns of that flock of which it was His most gracious pleasure to make me the unworthy shepherd
CHAPTER I YEAR 1760
The Anno Domini one thousand seven hundred and sixty was remarkable for three things in the parish of Dalmailing—First and foremost there was my placing then the coming of Mrs Malcolm with her five children to settle among us and next my marriage upon my own cousin Miss Betty Lanshaw by which the account of this year naturally divides itself into three heads or portions
First of the placing—It was a great affair for I was put in by the patron and the people knew nothing whatsoever of me and their hearts were stirred into strife on the occasion and they did all that lay within the compass of their power to keep me out insomuch that there was obliged to be a guard of soldiers to protect the presbytery and it was a thing that made my heart grieve when I heard the drum beating and the fife playing as we were going to the kirk The people were really mad and vicious and flung dirt upon us as we passed and reviled us all and held out the finger of scorn at me but I endured it with a resigned spirit compassionating their wilfulness and blindness Poor old Mr Kilfuddy of the Braehill got such a clash of glar on the side of his face that his eye was almost extinguished
When we got to the kirk door it was found to be nailed up so as by no possibility to be opened The sergeant of the soldiers wanted to break it but I was afraid that the heritors would grudge and complain of the expense of a new door and I supplicated him to let it be as it was we were therefore obligated to go in by a window and the crowd followed us in the most unreverent manner making the Lords house like an inn on a fair day with their grievous yellyhooing During the time of the psalm and the sermon they behaved themselves better but when the induction came on their clamour was dreadful and Thomas Thorl the weaver a pious zealot in that time he got up and protested and said Verily verily I say unto you he that entereth not by the door into the sheepfold but climbeth up some other way the same is a thief and a robber And I thought I would have a hard and sore time of it with such an outstrapolous people Mr Given that was then the minister of Lugton was a jocose man and would have his joke even at a solemnity When the laying of the hands upon me was adoing he could not get near enough to put on his but he stretched out his staff and touched my head and said to the great diversion of the rest This will do well enough timber to timber but it was an unfriendly saying of Mr Given considering the time and the place and the temper of my people
After the ceremony we then got out at the window and it was a heavy day to me but we went to the manse and there we had an excellent dinner which Mrs Watts of the new inns of Irville 2 prepared at my request and sent her chaisedriver to serve for he was likewise her waiter she having then but one chaise and that no often called for
But although my people received me in this unruly manner I was resolved to cultivate civility among them and therefore the very next morning I began a round of visitations but oh it was a steep brae that I had to climb and it needed a stout heart For I found the doors in some places barred against me in others the bairns when they saw me coming ran crying to their mothers Heres the feckless MessJohn and then when I went into the houses their parents wouldna ask me to sit down but with a scornful way said Honest man whats your pleasure here Nevertheless I walked about from door to door like a dejected beggar till I got the almous deed of a civil reception—and who would have thought it— from no less a person than the same Thomas Thorl that was so bitter against me in the kirk on the foregoing day
Thomas was standing at the door with his green duffle apron and his red Kilmarnock nightcap—I mind him as well as if it was but yesterday—and he had seen me going from house to house and in what manner I was rejected and his bowels were moved and he said to me in a kind manner Come in sir and ease yoursel this will never do the clergy are Gods gorbies and for their Masters sake it behoves us to respect them There was no ane in the whole parish mair against you than mysel but this early visitation is a symptom of grace that I couldna have expectit from a bird out the nest of patronage I thanked Thomas and went in with him and we had some solid conversation together and I told him that it was not so much the pastors duty to feed the flock as to herd them well and that although there might be some abler with the head than me there wasna a he within the bounds of Scotland more willing to watch the fold by night and by day And Thomas said he had not heard a mair sound observe for some time and that if I held to that doctrine in the poopit it wouldna be lang till I would work a change—I was mindit quoth he never to set my foot within the kirk door while you were there but to testify and no to condemn without a trial Ill be there next Lords day and egg my neighbours to be likewise so yell no have to preach just to the bare walls and the lairds family
I have now to speak of the coming of Mrs Malcolm—She was the widow of a Clyde shipmaster that was lost at sea with his vessel She was a genty body calm and methodical From morning to night she sat at her wheel spinning the finest lint which suited well with her pale hands She never changed her widows weeds and she was aye as if she had just been taen out of a bandbox The tear was aften in her ee when the bairns were at the school but when they came home her spirit was lighted up with gladness although poor woman she had many a time very little to give them They were however wonderful wellbred things and took with thankfulness whatever she set before them for they knew that their father the breadwinner was away and that she had to work sore for their bit and drap I dare say the only vexation that ever she had from any of them on their own account was when Charlie the eldest laddie had won fourpence at pitchandtoss at the school which he brought home with a proud heart to his mother I happened to be daunrin by at the time and just looked in at the door to say gudenight it was a sad sight There was she sitting with the silent tear on her cheek and Charlie greeting as if he had done a great fault and the other four looking on with sorrowful faces Never I am sure did Charlie Malcolm gamble after that night
I often wondered what brought Mrs Malcolm to our clachan instead of going to a populous town where she might have taken up a huxtry shop as she was but of a silly constitution the which would have been better for her than spinning from morning to far in the night as if she was in verity drawing the thread of life But it was no doubt from an honest pride to hide her poverty for when her daughter Effie was ill with the measles—the poor lassie was very ill—nobody thought she could come through and when she did get the turn she was for many a day a heavy handful—our session being rich and nobody on it but cripple Tammy Daidles that was at that time known through all the country side for begging on a horse I thought it my duty to call upon Mrs Malcolm in a sympathising way and offer her some assistance but she refused it
No sir said she I canna take help from the poorsbox although its very true that I am in great need for it might hereafter be cast up to my bairns whom it may please God to restore to better circumstances when I am no to seet but I would fain borrow five pounds and if sir you will write to Mr Maitland that is now the Lord Provost of Glasgow and tell him that Marion Shaw would be obliged to him for the lend of that soom I think he will not fail to send it
I wrote the letter that night to Provost Maitland and by the retour of the post I got an answer with twenty pounds for Mrs Malcolm saying That it was with sorrow he heard so small a trifle could be serviceable When I took the letter and the money which was in a bankbill she said This is just like himsel She then told me that Mr Maitland had been a gentlemans son of the east country but driven out of his fathers house when a laddie by his stepmother and that he had served as a servant lad with her father who was the Laird of Yillcogie but ran through his estate and left her his only daughter in little better than beggary with her auntie the mother of Captain Malcolm her husband that was Provost Maitland in his servitude had taen a notion of her and when he recovered his patrimony and had become a great Glasgow merchant on hearing how she was left by her father he offered to marry her but she had promised herself to her cousin the captain whose widow she was He then married a rich lady and in time grew as he was Lord Provost of the city but his letter with the twenty pounds to me showed that he had not forgotten his first love It was a short but a wellwritten letter in a fair hand of write containing much of the true gentleman and Mrs Malcolm said Who knows but out of the regard he once had for their mother he may do something for my five helpless orphans
Thirdly Upon the subject of taking my cousin Miss Betty Lanshaw for my first wife I have little to say—It was more out of a compassionate habitual affection than the passion of love We were brought up by our grandmother in the same house and it was a thing spoken of from the beginning that Betty and me were to be married So when she heard that the Laird of Breadland had given me the presentation of Dalmailing she began to prepare for the wedding and as soon as the placing was well over and the manse in order I gaed to Ayr where she was and we were quietly married and came home in a chaise bringing with us her little brother Andrew that died in the East Indies and he lived and was brought up by us
Now this is all I think that happened in that year worthy of being mentioned except that at the sacrament when old Mr Kilfuddy was preaching in the tent it came on such a thunderplump that there was not a single soul stayed in the kirkyard to hear him for the which he was greatly mortified and never after came to our preachings
CHAPTER II YEAR 1761
It was in this year that the great smuggling trade corrupted all the west coast especially the laigh lands about the Troon and the Loans The tea was going like the chaff the brandy like well water and the wastrie of all things was terrible There was nothing minded but the riding of cadgers by day and excisemen by night—and battles between the smugglers and the kings men both by sea and land There was a continual drunkenness and debauchery and our session that was but on the lip of this whirlpool of iniquity had an awful time ot I did all that was in the power of nature to keep my people from the contagion I preached sixteen times from the text Render to Caesar the things that are Caesars I visited and I exhorted I warned and I prophesied I told them that although the money came in like sclate stones it would go like the snow off the dyke But for all I could do the evil got in among us and we had no less than three contested bastard bairns upon our hands at one time which was a thing never heard of in a parish of the shire of Ayr since the Reformation Two of the bairns after no small sifting and searching we got fathered at last but the third that was by Meg Glaiks and given to one Rab Rickerton was utterly refused though the fact was not denied but he was a termagant fellow and snappit his fingers at the elders The next day he listed in the Scotch Greys who were then quartered at Ayr and we never heard more of him but thought he had been slain in battle till one of the parish about three years since went up to London to lift a legacy from a cousin that died among the Hindoos When he was walking about seeing the curiosities and among others Chelsea Hospital he happened to speak to some of the invalids who found out from his tongue that he was a Scotchman and speaking to the invalids one of them a very old man with a grey head and a leg of timber inquired what part of Scotland he was come from and when he mentioned my parish the invalid gave a great shout and said he was from the same place himself and who should this old man be but the very identical Rab Rickerton that was art and part in Meg Glaiks disowned bairn Then they had a long converse together and he had come through many hardships but had turned out a good soldier and so in his old days was an indoor pensioner and very comfortable and he said that he had to be sure spent his youth in the devils service and his manhood in the kings but his old age was given to that of his Maker which I was blithe and thankful to hear and he enquired about many a one in the parish the blooming and the green of his time but they were all dead and buried and he had a contrite and penitent spirit and read his Bible every day delighting most in the Book of Joshua the Chronicles and the Kings
Before this year the drinking of tea was little known in the parish saving among a few of the heritors houses on a Sabbath evening but now it became very rife yet the commoner sort did not like to let it be known that they were taking to the new luxury especially the elderly women who for that reason had their ploys in outhouses and byplaces just as the witches lang syne had their sinful possets and galravitchings and they made their tea for common in the pintstoup and drank it out of caps and luggies for there were but few among them that had cups and saucers Well do I remember one night in harvest in this very year as I was taking my twilight dauner aneath the hedge along the back side of Thomas Thorls yard meditating on the goodness of Providence and looking at the sheaves of victual on the field that I heard his wife and two three other carlins with their Bohea in the inside of the hedge and no doubt but it had a lacing of the conek 3 for they were all cracking like penguns But I gave them a sign by a loud host that Providence sees all and it skailed the bike for I heard them like guilty creatures whispering and gathering up their truckpots and trenchers and cowering away home
It was in this year that Patrick Dilworth he had been schoolmaster of the parish from the time as his wife said of Anna Regina and before the Rexes came to the crown was disabled by a paralytic and the heritors grudging the cost of another schoolmaster as long as he lived would not allow the session to get his place supplied which was a wrong thing I must say of them for the children of the parishioners were obliged therefore to go to the neighbouring towns for their schooling and the custom was to take a piece of bread and cheese in their pockets for dinner and to return in the evening always voracious for more the long walk helping the natural crave of their young appetites In this way Mrs Malcolms two eldest laddies Charlie and Robert were wont to go to Irville and it was soon seen that they kept themselves aloof from the other callans in the clachan and had a genteeler turn than the grulshy bairns of the cottars Her bit lassies Kate and Effie were better off for some years before Nanse Banks had taken up a teaching in a garretroom of a house at the corner where John Bayne has biggit the sclatehouse for his groceryshop Nanse learnt them reading and working stockings and how to sew the semplar for twalpennies aweek She was a patient creature well cut out for her calling with blear een a pale face and a long neck but meek and contented withal tholing the dule of this world with a Christian submission of the spirit and her garretroom was a cordial of cleanliness for she made the scholars set the house in order time and time about every morning and it was a common remark for many a day that the lassies who had been at Nanse Bankss school were always well spoken of both for their civility and the trigness of their houses when they were afterwards married In short I do not know that in all the long epoch of my ministry any individual body did more to improve the ways of the parishioners in their domestic concerns than did that worthy and innocent creature Nanse Banks the schoolmistress and she was a great loss when she was removed as it is to be hoped to a better world but anent this I shall have to speak more at large hereafter
It was in this year that my patron the Laird of Breadland departed this life and I preached his funeral sermon but he was nonbeloved in the parish for my people never forgave him for putting me upon them although they began to be more on a familiar footing with myself This was partly owing to my first wife Betty Lanshaw who was an active throughgoing woman and wonderfu useful to many of the cottars wives at their lyingin and when a death happened among them her helping hand and any thing we had at the manse was never wanting and I went about myself to the bedsides of the frail leaving no stone unturned to win the affections of my people which by the blessing of the Lord in process of time was brought to a bearing
But a thing happened in this year which deserves to be recorded as manifesting what effect the smuggling was beginning to take in the morals of the country side One Mr Macskipnish of Highland parentage who had been a valetdechambre with a major in the campaigns and taken a prisoner with him by the French he having come home in a cartel took up a dancingschool at Irville the which art he had learnt in the genteelest fashion in the mode of Paris at the French court Such a thing as a dancingschool had never in the memory of man been known in our country side and there was such a sound about the steps and cottillions of Mr Macskipnish that every lad and lass that could spare time and siller went to him to the great neglect of their work The very bairns on the loan instead of their wonted play gaed linking and louping in the steps of Mr Macskipnish who was to be sure a great curiosity with long spindle legs his breast shot out like a ducks and his head powdered and frizzled up like a tappithen He was indeed the proudest peacock that could be seen and he had a ring on his finger and when he came to drink his tea at the Breadland he brought no hat on his head but a droll cockit thing under his arm which he said was after the manner of the courtiers at the petty suppers of one Madam Pompadour who was at that time the concubine of the French king
I do not recollect any other remarkable thing that happened in this year The harvest was very abundant and the meal so cheap that it caused a great defect in my stipend so that I was obligated to postpone the purchase of a mahogany scrutoire for my study as I had intended But I had not the heart to complain of this on the contrary I rejoiced thereat for what made me want my scrutoire till another year had carried blitheness into the hearth of the cottar and made the widows heart sing with joy and I would have been an unnatural creature had I not joined in the universal gladness because plenty did abound
CHAPTER III YEAR 1762
The third year of my ministry was long held in remembrance for several very memorable things William Byres of the Loanhead had a cow that calved two calves at one calving Mrs Byres the same year had twins male and female and there was such a crop on his fields testifying that the Lord never sends a mouth into the world without providing meat for it But what was thought a very daunting sign of something happened on the Sacrament Sabbath at the conclusion of the action sermon when I had made a very suitable discourse The day was tempestuous and the wind blew with such a pith and birr that I thought it would have twirled the trees in the kirkyard out by the roots and blowing in this manner it tirled the thack from the rigging of the manse stable and the same blast that did that took down the lead that was on the kirkroof which hurled off as I was saying at the conclusion of the action sermon with such a dreadful sound as the like was never heard and all the congregation thought that it betokened a mutation to me However nothing particular happened to me but the smallpox came in among the weans of the parish and the smashing that it made of the poor bits o bairns was indeed woeful
One Sabbath when the pestilence was raging I preached a sermon about Rachel weeping for her children which Thomas Thorl who was surely a great judge of good preaching said was a monument of divinity whilk searched the heart of many a parent that day a thing I was well pleased to hear for Thomas as I have related at length was the most zealous champion against my getting the parish but from this time I set him down in my mind for the next vacancy among the elders Worthy man it was not permitted him to arrive at that honour In the fall of that year he took an income in his legs and couldna go about and was laid up for the remainder of his days a perfect Lazarus by the fireside But he was well supported in his affliction In due season when it pleased Him that alone can give and take to pluck him from this life as the fruit ripened and ready for the gathering his death to all that knew him was a gentle dispensation for truly he had been in sore trouble
It was in this year that Charlie Malcolm Mrs Malcolms eldest son was sent to be a cabinboy in the Tobacco trader a threemasted ship that sailed between PortGlasgow and Virginia in America She was commanded by Captain Dickie an Irville man for at that time the Clyde was supplied with the best sailors from our coast the coaltrade with Ireland being a better trade for bringing up good mariners than the long voyages in the open sea which was the reason as I often heard said why the Clyde shipping got so many of their men from our country side The going to sea of Charlie Malcolm was on divers accounts a very remarkable thing to us all for he was the first that ever went from our parish in the memory of man to be a sailor and everybody was concerned at it and some thought it was a great venture of his mother to let him his father having been lost at sea But what could the forlorn widow do She had five weans and little to give them and as she herself said he was aye in the hand of his Maker go where he might and the will of God would be done in spite of all earthly wiles and devices to the contrary
On the Monday morning when Charlie was to go away to meet the Irville carrier on the road we were all up and I walked by myself from the manse into the clachan to bid him farewell and I met him just coming from his mothers door as blithe as a bee in his sailors dress with a stick and a bundle tied in a Barcelona silk handkerchief hanging oer his shoulder and his two little brothers were with him and his sisters Kate and Effie looking out from the door all begreeten but his mother was in the house praying to the Lord to protect her orphan as she afterwards told me All the weans of the clachan were gathered at the kirkyard yett to see him pass and they gave him three great shouts as he was going by and everybody was at their doors and said something encouraging to him but there was a great laugh when auld Mizy Spaewell came hirpling with her bauchle in her hand and flung it after him for goodluck Mizy had a wonderful faith in freats and was just an oracle of sagacity at expounding dreams and bodes of every sort and description—besides she was reckoned one of the best howdies in her day but by this time she was grown frail and feckless and she died the same year on Halloween which made everybody wonder that it should have so fallen out for her to die on Halloween
Shortly after the departure of Charlie Malcolm the Lady of Breadland with her three daughters removed to Edinburgh where the young laird that had been my pupil was learning to be an advocate and the Breadlandhouse was set to Major Gilchrist a nabob from India but he was a narrow ailing man and his maidensister Miss Girzie was the scrimpetest creature that could be so that in their hands all the pretty policy of the Breadlands that had cost a power of money to the old laird that was my patron fell into decay and disorder and the bonny yewtrees that were cut into the shape of peacocks soon grew out of all shape and are now doleful monuments of the majors tack and that of Lady Skimmilk as Miss Girzie Gilchrist his sister was nicknamed by every ane that kent her
But it was not so much on account of the neglect of the Breadland that the incoming of Major Gilchrist was to be deplored The old men that had a light labour in keeping the policy in order were thrown out of bread and could do little and the poor women that whiles got a bit and a drap from the kitchen of the family soon felt the change so that by little and little we were obligated to give help from the session insomuch that before the end of the year I was necessitated to preach a discourse on almsgiving specially for the benefit of our own poor a thing never before known in the parish
But one good thing came from the Gilchrists to Mrs Malcolm Miss Girzie whom they called Lady Skimmilk had been in a very penurious way as a seamstress in the Gorbals of Glasgow while her brother was making the fortune in India and she was a clever needlewoman— none better as it was said and she having some things to make took Kate Malcolm to help her in the coarse work and Kate being a nimble and birky thing was so useful to the lady and the complaining man the major that they invited her to stay with them at the Breadland for the winter where although she was holden to her seam from morning to night her food lightened the hand of her mother who for the first time since her coming into the parish found the penny for the days darg more than was needed for the mealbasin and the teadrinking was beginning to spread more openly insomuch that by the advice of the first Mrs Balwhidder Mrs Malcolm took in tea to sell and in this way was enabled to eke something to the small profits of her wheel Thus the tide that had been so long ebbing to her began to turn and here I am bound in truth to say that although I never could abide the smuggling both on its own account and the evils that grew therefrom to the country side I lost some of my dislike to the tea after Mrs Malcolm began to traffic in it and we then had it for our breakfast in the morning at the manse as well as in the afternoon But what I thought most of it for was that it did no harm to the head of the drinkers which was not always the case with the possets that were in fashion before There is no meeting now in the summer evenings as I remember often happened in my younger days with decent ladies coming home with red faces tosy and cosh from a possetmasking so both for its temperance and on account of Mrs Malcolms sale I refrained from the November in this year to preach against tea but I never lifted the weight of my displeasure from off the smuggling trade until it was utterly put down by the strong hand of government
There was no other thing of note in this year saving only that I planted in the garden the big peartree which had the two great branches that we call the Adam and Eve I got the plant then a sapling from Mr Graft that was Lord Eagleshams headgardener and he said it was as indeed all the parish now knows well a most juicy sweet pear such as was not known in Scotland till my lord brought down the father plant from the kings garden in London in the fortyfive when he went up to testify his loyalty to the House of Hanover
CHAPTER IV YEAR 1763
The An Dom 1763 was in many a respect a memorable year both in public and in private The King granted peace to the French and Charlie Malcolm that went to sea in the Tobacco trader came home to see his mother The ship after being at America had gone down to Jamaica an island in the West Indies with a cargo of live lumber as Charlie told me himself and had come home with more than a hundred and fifty hoggits of sugar and sixtythree puncheons full of rum for she was by all accounts a stately galley and almost two hundred tons in the burthen being the largest vessel then sailing from the creditable town of PortGlasgow Charlie was not expected and his coming was a great thing to us all so I will mention the whole particulars
One evening towards the gloaming as I was taking my walk of meditation I saw a brisk sailor laddie coming towards me He had a pretty green parrot sitting on a bundle tied in a Barcelona silk handkerchief which he carried with a stick over his shoulder and in this bundle was a wonderful big nut such as no one in our parish had ever seen It was called a cockernut This blithe callant was Charlie Malcolm who had come all the way that day his leeful lane on his own legs from Greenock where the Tobacco trader was then livering her cargo I told him how his mother and his brothers and his sisters were all in good health and went to convoy him home and as we were going along he told me many curious things and he gave me six beautiful yellow limes that he had brought in his pouch all the way across the seas for me to make a bowl of punch with and I thought more of them than if they had been golden guineas it was so mindful of the laddie
When we got to the door of his mothers house she was sitting at the fireside with her three other bairns at their bread and milk Kate being then with Lady Skimmilk at the Breadland sewing It was between the day and dark when the shuttle stands still till the lamp is lighted But such a shout of joy and thankfulness as rose from that hearth when Charlie went in The very parrot ye would have thought was a participator for the beast gied a skraik that made my whole head dirl and the neighbours came flying and flocking to see what was the matter for it was the first parrot ever seen within the bounds of the parish and some thought it was but a foreign hawk with a yellow head and green feathers
In the midst of all this Effie Malcolm had run off to the Breadland for her sister Kate and the two lassies came flying breathless with Miss Girzie Gilchrist the Lady Skimmilk pursuing them like desperation or a griffin down the avenue for Kate in her hurry had flung down her seam a new printed gown that she was helping to make and it had fallen into a boyne of milk that was ready for the creaming by which issued a double misfortune to Miss Girzie the gown being not only ruined but licking up the cream For this poor Kate was not allowed ever to set her face in the Breadland again
When Charlie Malcolm had stayed about a week with his mother he returned to his berth in the Tobacco trader and shortly after his brother Robert was likewise sent to serve his time to the sea with an owner that was master of his own bark in the coal trade at Irville Kate who was really a surprising lassie for her years was taken off her mothers hands by the old Lady Macadam that lived in her jointure house which is now the Cross Keys Inn Her ladyship was a woman of high breeding her husband having been a great general and knighted by the king for his exploits but she was lame and could not move about in her diningroom without help so hearing from the first Mrs Balwhidder how Kate had done such an unatonable deed to Miss Girzie Gilchrist she sent for Kate and finding her sharp and apt she took her to live with her as a companion This was a vast advantage for the lady was versed in all manner of accomplishments and could read and speak French with more ease than any professor at that time in the College of Glasgow and she had learnt to sew flowers on satin either in a nunnery abroad or in a boardingschool in England and took pleasure in teaching Kate all she knew and how to behave herself like a lady
In the summer of this year old Mr Patrick Dilworth that had so long been doited with the paralytics died and it was a great relief to my people for the heritors could no longer refuse to get a proper schoolmaster so we took on trial Mr Lorimore who has ever since the year after with so much credit to himself and usefulness to the parish been schoolmaster session clerk and precentor—a man of great mildness and extraordinary particularity He was then a very young man and some objection was made on account of his youth to his being sessionclerk especially as the smuggling immorality still gave us much trouble in the making up of irregular marriages but his discretion was greater than could have been hoped for from his years and after a twelvemonths probation in the capacity of schoolmaster he was installed in all the offices that had belonged to his predecessor old Mr Patrick Dilworth that was
But the most memorable thing that befell among my people this year was the burning of the lintmill on the Lugton water which happened of all the days of the year on the very selfsame day that Miss Girzie Gilchrist better known as Lady Skimmilk hired the chaise from Mrs Watts of the New Inns of Irville to go with her brother the major to consult the faculty in Edinburgh concerning his complaints For as the chaise was coming by the mill William Huckle the miller that was came flying out of the mill like a demented man crying fire—and it was the driver that brought the melancholy tidings to the clachan—and melancholy they were for the mill was utterly destroyed and in it not a little of all that years crop of lint in our parish The first Mrs Balwhidder lost upwards of twelve stone which we had raised on the glebe with no small pains watering it in the drouth as it was intended for sarking to ourselves and sheets and napery A great loss indeed it was and the vexation thereof had a visible effect on Mrs Balwhidders health which from the spring had been in a dwining way But for it I think she might have wrestled through the winter however it was ordered otherwise and she was removed from mine to Abrahams bosom on Christmasday and buried on Hogmanay for it was thought uncanny to have a dead corpse in the house on the newyears day She was a worthy woman studying with all her capacity to win the hearts of my people towards me—in the which good work she prospered greatly so that when she died there was not a single soul in the parish that was not contented with both my walk and conversation Nothing could be more peaceable than the way we lived together Her brother Andrew a fine lad I had sent to the college at Glasgow at my own cost and when he came out to the burial he stayed with me a month for the manse after her decease was very dull and it was during this visit that he gave me an inkling of his wish to go out to India as a cadet but the transactions anent that fall within the scope of another year—as well as what relates to her headstone and the epitaph in metre which I indicated myself thereon John Truel the mason carving the same as may be seen in the kirkyard where it wants a little reparation and setting upright having settled the wrong way when the second Mrs Balwhidder was laid by her side—But I must not here enter upon an anticipation
CHAPTER V YEAR 1764
This year well deserved the name of the monumental year in our parish for the young laird of the Breadland that had been my pupil being learning to be an advocate among the faculty in Edinburgh with his lady mother who had removed thither with the young ladies her daughters for the benefit of education sent out to be put up in the kirk under the loft over the family vault an elegant marble headstone with an epitaph engraven thereon in fair Latin setting forth many excellent qualities which the old laird my patron that was the inditer thereof said he possessed I say the inditer because it couldna have been the young laird himself although he got the credit ot on the stone for he was nae daub in my aught at the Latin or any other language However he might improve himself at Edinburgh where a manner of genteel things were then to be got at an easy rate and doubtless the young laird got a probationer at the College to write the epitaph but I have often wondered sin syne how he came to make it in Latin for assuredly his dead parent if he could have seen it could not have read a single word ot notwithstanding it was so vaunty about his virtues and other civil and hospitable qualifications
The coming of the lairds monumental stone had a great effect on me then in a state of deep despondency for the loss of the first Mrs Balwhidder and I thought I could not do a better thing just by way of diversion in my heavy sorrow than to get a wellshapen headstone made for her—which as I have hinted at in the record of the last year was done and set up But a headstone without an epitaph is no better than a body without the breath of life int and so it behoved me to make a poesy for the monument the which I conned and pondered upon for many days I thought as Mrs Balwhidder worthy woman as she was did not understand the Latin tongue it would not do to put on what I had to say in that language as the laird had done—nor indeed would it have been easy as I found upon the experimenting to tell what I had to tell in Latin which is naturally a crabbed language and very difficult to write properly I therefore after mentioning her age and the dates of her birth and departure composed in sedate poetry the following epitaph which may yet be seen on the tombstone
EPITAPH
A lovely Christian spouse and friend
Pleasant in life and at her end
A pale consumption dealt the blow
That laid her here with dust below
Sore was the cough that shook her frame
That cough her patience did proclaim
And as she drew her latest breath
She said The Lord is sweet in death
O pious reader standing by
Learn like this gentle one to die
The grass doth grow and fade away
And time runs out by night and day
The King of Terrors has command
To strike us with his dart in hand
Go where we will by flood or field
He will pursue and make us yield
But though to him we must resign
The vesture of our part divine
There is a jewel in our trust
That will not perish in the dust
A pearl of price a precious gem
Ordained for Jesus diadem
Therefore be holy while you can
And think upon the doom of man
Repent in time and sin no more
That when the strife of life is oer
On wings of love your soul may rise
To dwell with angels in the skies
Where psalms are sung eternally
And martyrs neer again shall die
But with the saints still bask in bliss
And drink the cup of blessedness
This was greatly thought of at the time and Mr Lorimore who had a nerve for poesy himself in his younger years was of opinion that it was so much to the purpose and suitable withal that he made his scholars write it out for their examination copies at the reading whereof before the heritors when the examination of the school came round the tear came into my eye and every one present sympathized with me in my great affliction for the loss of the first Mrs Balwhidder
Andrew Langshaw as I have recorded having come from the Glasgow College to the burial of his sister my wife that was stayed with me a month to keep me company and staying with me he was a great cordial for the weather was wet and sleety and the nights were stormy so that I could go little out and few of the elders came in they being at that time old men in a feckless condition not at all qualified to warsle with the blasts of winter But when Andrew left me to go back to his classes I was eerie and lonesome and but for the getting of the monument ready which was a blessed entertainment to me in those dreary nights with consulting anent the shape of it with John Truel and meditating on the verse for the epitaph I might have gone altogether demented However it pleased Him who is the surety of the sinner to help me through the Slough of Despond and to set my feet on firm land establishing my way thereon
But the work of the monument and the epitaph could not endure for a constancy and after it was done I was again in great danger of sinking into the hypochonderies a second time However I was enabled to fight with my affliction and byandby as the spring began to open her green lattice and to set out her flowerpots to the sunshine and the time of the singing of birds was come I became more composed and like myself so I often walked in the fields and held communion with nature and wondered at the mysteries thereof
On one of these occasions as I was sauntering along the edge of Eagleshamwood looking at the industrious bee going from flower to flower and the idle butterfly that layeth up no store but perisheth ere it is winter I felt as it were a spirit from on high descending upon me a throb at my heart and a thrill in my brain and I was transported out of myself and seized with the notion of writing a book—but what it should be about I could not settle to my satisfaction Sometimes I thought of an orthodox poem like PARADISE LOST by John Milton wherein I proposed to treat more at large of Original Sin and the great mystery of Redemption at others I fancied that a connect treatise on the efficacy of Free Grace would be more taking but although I made divers beginnings in both subjects some new thought ever came into my head and the whole summer passed away and nothing was done I therefore postponed my design of writing a book till the winter when I would have the benefit of the long nights Before that however I had other things of more importance to think about My servant lasses having no eye of a mistress over them wastered every thing at such a rate and made such a galravitching in the house that long before the end of the year the years stipend was all spent and I did not know what to do At lang and length I mustered courage to send for Mr Auld who was then living and an elder He was a douce and discreet man fair and welldoing in the world and had a better handful of strong common sense than many even of the heritors So I told him how I was situated and conferred with him and he advised me for my own sake to look out for another wife as soon as decency would allow which he thought might very properly be after the turn of the year by which time the first Mrs Balwhidder would be dead more than twelve months and when I mentioned my design to write a book he said and he was a man of good discretion that the doing of the book was a thing that would keep but masterful servants were a growing evil so upon his counselling I resolved not to meddle with the book till I was married again but employ the interim between then and the turn of the year in looking out for a prudent woman to be my second wife strictly intending as I did perform not to mint a word about my choice if I made one till the whole twelve months and a day from the date of the first Mrs Balwhidders interment had run out
In this the hand of Providence was very visible and lucky for me it was that I had sent for Mr Auld when I did send as the very week following a sound began to spread in the parish that one of my lassies had got herself with bairn which was an awful thing to think had happened in the house of her master and that master a minister of the gospel Some there were for backbiting appertaineth to all conditions that jealoused and wondered if I had not a finger in the pie which when Mr Auld heard he bestirred himself in such a manful and godly way in my defence as silenced the clash telling that I was utterly incapable of any such thing being a man of a guileless heart and a spiritual simplicity that would be ornamental in a child We then had the latheron summoned before the session and was not long of making her confess that the father was Nichol Snipe Lord Glencairns gamekeeper and both her and Nichol were obligated to stand in the kirk but Nichol was a graceless reprobate for he came with two coats one buttoned behind him and another buttoned before him and two wigs of my lords lent him by the valetdechamer the one over his face and the other in the right way and he stood with his face to the church wall When I saw him from the poopit I said to him—Nichol you must turn your face towards me At the which he turned round to be sure but there he presented the same show as his back I was confounded and did not know what to say but cried out with a voice of anger—Nichol Nichol if ye had been a back ye wouldna hae been there this day which had such an effect on the whole congregation that the poor fellow suffered afterwards more derision than if I had rebuked him in the manner prescribed by the session
This affair with the previous advice of Mr Auld was however a warning to me that no pastor of his parish should be long without a helpmate Accordingly as soon as the year was out I set myself earnestly about the search for one but as the particulars fall properly within the scope and chronicle of the next year I must reserve them for it and I do not recollect that any thing more particular befell in this excepting that William Mutchkins the father of Mr Mutchkins the great spiritdealer in Glasgow set up a changehouse in the clachan which was the first in the parish and which if I could have helped would have been the last for it was opening a howf to all manner of wickedness and was an immediate get and offspring of the smuggling trade against which I had so set my countenance But William Mutchkins himself was a respectable man and no house could be better ordered than his change At a stated hour he made family worship for he brought up his children in the fear of God and the Christian religion and although the house was full he would go in to the customers and ask them if they would want anything for half an hour for that he was going to make exercise with his family and many a wayfaring traveller has joined in the prayer There is no such thing I fear nowadays of publicans entertaining travellers in this manner
CHAPTER VI YEAR 1765
As there was little in the last year that concerned the parish but only myself so in this the like fortune continued and saving a rise in the price of barley occasioned as was thought by the establishment of a house for brewing whisky in a neighbouring parish it could not be said that my people were exposed to the mutations and influences of the stars which ruled in the seasons of Ann Dom 1765 In the winter there was a dearth of fuel such as has not been since for when the spring loosened the bonds of the ice three new coalheughs were shanked in the Douray moor and ever since there has been a great plenty of that necessary article Truly it is very wonderful to see how things come round When the talk was about the shanking of their heughs and a paper to get folk to take shares in them was carried through the circumjacent parishes it was thought a gowks errand but no sooner was the coal reached but up sprung such a traffic that it was a godsend to the parish and the opening of a trade and commerce that has to use an old byword brought gold in gowpins amang us From that time my stipend has been on the regular increase and therefore I think that the incoming of the heritors must have been in like manner augmented
Soon after this the time was drawing near for my second marriage I had placed my affections with due consideration on Miss Lizy Kibbock the well broughtup daughter of Mr Joseph Kibbock of the Gorbyholm who was the first that made a speculation in the farming way in Ayrshire and whose cheese were of such an excellent quality that they have under the name of Delapcheese spread far and wide over the civilized world Miss Lizy and me were married on the 29th day of April with some inconvenience to both sides on account of the dread that we had of being married in May for it is said
Of the marriages in May
The bairns die of a decay
However married we were and we hired the Irville chaise and with Miss Jenny her sister and Becky Cairns her niece who sat on a portmanty at our feet we went on a pleasure jaunt to Glasgow where we bought a miracle of useful things for the manse that neither the first Mrs Balwhidder nor me ever thought of but the second Mrs Balwhidder that was had a geni for management and it was extraordinary what she could go through Well may I speak of her with commendations for she was the bee that made my honey although at first things did not go so clear with us For she found the manse rookit and herrit and there was such a supply of plenishing of all sort wanted that I thought myself ruined and undone by her care and industry There was such a buying of wool to make blankets with a booming of the meikle wheel to spin the same and such birring of the little wheel for sheets and napery that the manse was for many a day like an organ kist Then we had milk cows and the calves to bring up and a kirning of butter and a making of cheese in short I was almost by myself with the jangle and din which prevented me from writing a book as I had proposed and I for a time thought of the peaceful and kindly nature of the first Mrs Balwhidder with a sigh but the outcoming was soon manifest The second Mrs Balwhidder sent her butter on the marketdays to Irville and her cheese from time to time to Glasgow to Mrs Firlot that kept the huxtry in the Saltmarket and they were both so well made that our dairy was just a coining of money insomuch that after the first year we had the whole tot of my stipend to put untouched into the bank
But I must say that although we were thus making siller like sclate stones I was not satisfied in my own mind that I had got the manse merely to be a factory of butter and cheese and to breed up veal calves for the slaughter so I spoke to the second Mrs Balwhidder and pointed out to her what I thought the error of our way but she had been so ingrained with the profitable management of cows and grumphies in her fathers house that she could not desist at the which I was greatly grieved Byandby however I began to discern that there was something as good in her example as the giving of alms to the poor folk for all the wives of the parish were stirred up by it into a wonderful thrift and nothing was heard of in every house but of quiltings and wabs to weave insomuch that before many years came round there was not a better stocked parish with blankets and napery than mine was within the bounds of Scotland
It was about the Michaelmas of this year that Mrs Malcolm opened her shop which she did chiefly on the advice of Mrs Balwhidder who said it was far better to allow a little profit on the different haberdasheries that might be wanted than to send to the neighbouring towns an ends errand on purpose for them none of the lasses that were so sent ever thinking of making less than a days play on every such occasion In a word it is not to be told how the second Mrs Balwhidder my wife showed the value of flying time even to the concerns of this world and was the mean of giving a life and energy to the housewifery of the parish that has made many a one beek his shins in comfort that would otherwise have had but a cold coal to blow at Indeed Mr Kibbock her father was a man beyond the common and had an insight of things by which he was enabled to draw profit and advantage where others could only see risk and detriment He planted mounts of firtrees on the bleak and barren tops of the hills of his farm the which everybody and I among the rest considered as a thrashing of the water and raising of bells But as his rack ran his trees grew and the plantations supplied him with stabs to make STAKE AND RICE between his fields which soon gave them a trig and orderly appearance such as had never before been seen in the west country and his example has in this matter been so followed that I have heard travellers say who have been in foreign countries that the shire of Ayr for its bonny round green plantings on the tops of the hills is above comparison either with Italy or Switzerland where the hills are as it were in a state of nature
Upon the whole this was a busy year in the parish and the seeds of many great improvements were laid The kings road the which then ran through the Vennel was mended but it was not till some years after as I shall record byandby that the trustroad as it was called was made the which had the effect of turning the town inside out
Before I conclude it is proper to mention that the kirkbell which had to this time from time immemorial hung on an ashtree was one stormy night cast down by the breaking of the branch which was the cause of the heritors agreeing to build the steeple The clock was a mortification to the parish from the Lady Breadland when she died some years after
CHAPTER VII YEAR 1766
It was in this Ann Dom that the great calamity happened the which took place on a Sabbath evening in the month of February Mrs Balwhidder had just infused or masket the tea and we were set round the fireside to spend the night in an orderly and religious manner along with Mr and Mrs Petticrew who were on a friendly visitation to the manse the mistress being full cousin to Mrs Balwhidder— Sitting as I was saying at our tea one of the servant lasses came into the room with a sort of a panic laugh and said What are ye all doing there when the Breadlands in a low—The Breadland in a low cried I—Oh ay cried she bleezing at the windows and the rigging and out at the lum like a killogie Upon the which we all went to the door and there to be sure we did see that the Breadland was burning the flames crackling high out oer the trees and the sparks flying like a comets tail in the firmament
Seeing this sight I said to Mr Petticrew that in the strength of the Lord I would go and see what could be done for it was as plain as the sun in the heavens that the ancient place of the Breadlands would be destroyed whereupon he accorded to go with me and we walked at a lively course to the spot and the people from all quarters were pouring in and it was an awsome scene But the burning of the house and the droves of the multitude were nothing to what we saw when we got forenent the place There was the rafters crackling the flames raging the servants running some with bedding some with lookingglasses and others with chamber utensils as little likely to be fuel to the fire but all testifications to the confusion and alarm Then there was a shout Whars Miss Girzie whars the Major The Major poor man soon cast up lying upon a featherbed ill with his complaints in the garden but Lady Skimmilk was nowhere to be found At last a figure was seen in the upper flat pursued by the flames and that was Miss Girzie Oh it was a terrible sight to look at her in that jeopardy at the window with her gold watch in the one hand and the silver teapot in the other skreighing like desperation for a ladder and help But before a ladder or help could be found the floor sunk down and the roof fell in and poor Miss Girzie with her idols perished in the burning It was a dreadful business I think to this hour how I saw her at the window how the fire came in behind her and claught her like a fiery Belzebub and bore her into perdition before our eyes The next morning the atomy of the body was found among the rubbish with a piece of metal in what had been each of its hands no doubt the gold watch and the silver teapot Such was the end of Miss Girzie and the Breadland which the young laird my pupil that was by growing a resident at Edinburgh never rebuilt It was burnt to the very ground nothing was spared but what the servants in the first flaught gathered up in a hurry and ran with but no one could tell how the Major who was then as it was thought by the faculty past the power of nature to recover got out of the house and was laid on the featherbed in the garden However he never got the better of that night and before Whitsunday he was dead too and buried beside his sisters bones at the south side of the kirkyard dyke where his cousins son that was his heir erected the handsome monument with the three urns and weeping cherubims bearing witness to the great valour of the Major among the Hindoos as well as other commendable virtues for which as the epitaph says he was universally esteemed and beloved by all who knew him in his public and private capacity
But although the burning of the BreadlandHouse was justly called the great calamity on account of what happened to Miss Girzie with her gold watch and silver teapot yet as Providence never fails to bring good out of evil it turned out a catastrophe that proved advantageous to the parish for the laird instead of thinking to build it up was advised to let the policy out as a farm and the tack was taken by Mr Coulter than whom there had been no such man in the agriculturing line among us before not even excepting Mr Kibbock of the Gorbyholm my fatherinlaw that was Of the stabling Mr Coulter made a comfortable dwellinghouse and having rugget out the evergreens and other unprofitable plants saving the twa ancient yewtrees which the nearbegaun Major and his sister had left to go to ruin about the mansionhouse he turned all to production and it was wonderful what an increase he made the land bring forth He was from far beyond Edinburgh and had got his insight among the Lothian farmers so that he knew what crop should follow another and nothing could surpass the regularity of his rigs and furrows—Well do I remember the admiration that I had when in a fine sunny morning of the first spring after he took the Breadland I saw his braird on what had been the cows grass as even and pretty as if it had been worked and stripped in the loom with a shuttle Truly when I look back at the example he set and when I think on the method and dexterity of his management I must say that his coming to the parish was a great godsend and tended to do far more for the benefit of my people than if the young laird had rebuilded the BreadlandHouse in a fashionable style as was at one time spoken of
But the year of the great calamity was memorable for another thing in the December foregoing the wind blew as I have recorded in the chronicle of the last year and broke down the bough of the tree whereon the kirkbell had hung from the time as was supposed of the persecution before the bringing over of King William Mr Kibbock my fatherinlaw then that was being a man of a discerning spirit when he heard of the unfortunate fall of the bell advised me to get the heritors to big a steeple but which when I thought of the expense I was afraid to do He however having a great skill in the heart of man gave me no rest on the subject but told me that if I allowed the time to go by till the heritors were used to come to the kirk without a bell I would get no steeple at all I often wondered what made Mr Kibbock so fond of a steeple which is a thing that I never could see a good reason for saving that it is an ecclesiastical adjunct like the gown and bands However he set me on to get a steeple proposed and after no little argolbargling with the heritors it was agreed to This was chiefly owing to the instrumentality of Lady Moneyplack who in that winter was much subjected to the rheumatics she having one cold and raw Sunday morning there being no bell to announce the time come half an hour too soon to the kirk made her bestir herself to get an interest awakened among the heritors in behalf of a steeple
But when the steeple was built a new contention arose It was thought that the bell which had been used in the ashtree would not do in a stone and lime fabric so after great agitation among the heritors it was resolved to sell the old bell to a foundery in Glasgow and buy a new bell suitable to the steeple which was a very comely fabric The buying of the new bell led to other considerations and the old Lady Breadland being at the time in a decaying condition and making her will she left a mortification to the parish as I have intimated to get a clock so that by the time the steeple was finished and the bell put up the Lady Breadlands legacy came to be implemented according to the ordination of the testatrix
Of the casualities that happened in this year I should not forget to put down as a thing for remembrance that an aged woman one Nanse Birrel a distillator of herbs and well skilled in the healing of sores who had a great repute among the quarriers and colliers—she having gone to the physic well in the sandy hills to draw water was found with her feet uppermost in the well by some of the bairns of Mr Lorimores school and there was a great debate whether Nanse had fallen in by accident head foremost or in a temptation thrown herself in that position with her feet sticking up to the evil one for Nanse was a curious discontented bleareyed woman and it was only with great ado that I could get the people keepit from calling her a witchwife
I should likewise place on record that the first ass that had ever been seen in this part of the country came in the course of this year with a gang of tinklers that made hornspoons and mended bellows Where they came from never was well made out but being a blackaviced crew they were generally thought to be Egyptians They tarried about a week among us living in tents with their little ones squattling among the litter and one of the older men of them set and tempered to me two razors that were as good as nothing but which he made better than when they were new
Shortly after but I am not quite sure whether it was in the end of this year or the beginning of the next although I have a notion that it was in this there came over from Ireland a troop of wild Irish seeking for work as they said but they made free quarters for they herrit the roosts of the clachan and cutted the throat of a sow of ours the carcass of which they no doubt intended to steal but something came over them and it was found lying at the back side of the manse to the great vexation of Mrs Balwhidder for she had set her mind on a clecking of pigs and only waited for the China boar that had been brought down from London by Lord Eaglesham to mend the breed of pork—a profitable commodity that her father Mr Kibbock cultivated for the Glasgow market The destruction of our sow under such circumstances was therefore held to be a great crime and cruelty and it had the effect to raise up such a spirit in the clachan that the Irish were obligated to decamp and they set out for Glasgow where one of them was afterwards hanged for a fact but the truth concerning how he did it I either never heard or it has passed from my mind like many other things I should have carefully treasured
CHAPTER VIII YEAR 1767
All things in our parish were now beginning to shoot up into a great prosperity The spirit of farming began to get the upper hand of the spirit of smuggling and the coalheughs that had been opened in the Douray now brought a pour of money among us In the manse the thrift and frugality of the second Mrs Balwhidder throve exceedingly so that we could save the whole stipend for the bank
The kings highway as I have related in the foregoing ran through the Vennel which was a narrow and a crooked street with many big stones here and there and every now and then both in the spring and the fall a gathering of middens for the fields insomuch that the coalcarts from the Douray moor were often reested in the middle of the causey and on more than one occasion some of them laired altogether in the middens and others of them broke down Great complaint was made by the carters anent these difficulties and there was for many a day a talk and sound of an alteration and amendment but nothing was fulfilled in the matter till the month of March in this year when the Lord Eaglesham was coming from London to see the new lands that he had bought in our parish His lordship was a man of a genteel spirit and very fond of his horses which were the most beautiful creatures of their kind that had been seen in all the country side Coming as I was noting to see his new lands he was obliged to pass through the clachan one day when all the middens were gathered out reeking and sappy in the middle of the causey Just as his lordship was driving in with his prancing steeds like a Jehu at one end of the vennel a long string of loaded coalcarts came in at the other and there was hardly room for my lord to pass them What was to be done His lordship could not turn back and the coalcarts were in no less perplexity Every body was out of doors to see and to help when in trying to get his lordships carriage over the top of a midden the horses gave a sudden loup and couped the coach and threw my lord head foremost into the very scentbottle of the whole commodity which made him go perfect mad and he swore like a trooper that he would get an act of parliament to put down the nuisance—the which now ripened in the course of this year into the undertaking of the trustroad
His lordship being in a woeful plight left the carriage and came to the manse till his servant went to the castle for a change for him but he could not wait nor abide himself so he got the lend of my best suit of clothes and was wonderful jocose both with Mrs Balwhidder and me for he was a portly man and I but a thin body and it was really a droll curiosity to see his lordship clad in my garments
Out of this accident grew a sort of a neighbourliness between that Lord Eaglesham and me so that when Andrew Lanshaw the brother that was of the first Mrs Balwhidder came to think of going to India I wrote to my lord for his behoof and his lordship got him sent out as a cadet and was extraordinary discreet to Andrew when he went up to London to take his passage speaking to him of me as if I had been a very saint which the Searcher of Hearts knows I am far from thinking myself
But to return to the making of the trustroad which as I have said turned the town inside out It was agreed among the heritors that it should run along the back side of the south houses and that there should be steadings fued off on each side according to a plan that was laid down and this being gone into the town gradually in the course of years grew up into that orderlyness which makes it now a pattern to the country side—all which was mainly owing to the accident that befell the Lord Eaglesham which is a clear proof how improvements come about as it were by the immediate instigation of Providence which should make the heart of man humble and change his eyes of pride and haughtiness into a lowly demeanour
But although this making of the trustroad was surely a great thing for the parish and of an advantage to my people we met in this year with a loss not to be compensated—that was the death of Nanse Banks the schoolmistress She had been long in a weak and frail state but being a methodical creature still kept on the school laying the foundation for many a worthy wife and mother However about the decline of the year her complaints increased and she sent for me to consult about her giving up the school and I went to see her on Saturday afternoon when the bit lassies her scholars had put the house in order and gone home till the Monday
She was sitting in the windownook reading THE WORD to herself when I entered but she closed the book and put her spectacles in for a mark when she saw me and as it was expected I would come her easychair with a clean cover had been set out for me by the scholars by which I discerned that there was something more than common to happen and so it appeared when I had taken my seat
Sir said she I hae sent for you on a thing troubles me sairly I have warsled with poortith in this shed which it has pleased the Lord to allow me to possess but my strength is worn out and I fear I maun yield in the strife and she wiped her eye with her apron I told her however to be of good cheer and then she said That she could no longer thole the din of the school and that she was weary and ready to lay herself down to die whenever the Lord was pleased to permit But continued she what can I do without the school and alas I can neither work nor want and I am wae to go on the session for I am come of a decent family I comforted her and told her that I thought she had done so much good in the parish that the session was deep in her debt and that what they might give her was but a just payment for her service I would rather however sir said she try first what some of my auld scholars will do and it was for that I wanted to speak with you If some of them would but just from time to time look in upon me that I may not die alane and the little pick and drap that I require would not be hard upon them—I am more sure that in this way their gratitude would be no discredit than I am of having any claim on the session
As I had always a great respect for an honest pride I assured her that I would do what she wanted and accordingly the very morning after being Sabbath I preached a sermon on the helplessness of them that have no help of man meaning aged single women living in garretrooms whose forlorn state in the gloaming of life I made manifest to the hearts and understandings of the congregation in such a manner that many shed tears and went away sorrowful
Having thus roused the feelings of my people I went round the houses on the Monday morning and mentioned what I had to say more particularly about poor old Nanse Banks the schoolmistress and truly I was rejoiced at the condition of the hearts of my people There was a universal sympathy among them and it was soon ordered that what with one and another her decay should be provided for But it was not ordained that she should be long heavy on their good will On the Monday the school was given up and there was nothing but wailing among the bit lassies the scholars for getting the vacance as the poor things said because the mistress was going to lie down to dee And indeed so it came to pass for she took to her bed the same afternoon and in the course of the week dwindled away and slipped out of this howling wilderness into the kingdom of heaven on the Sabbath following as quietly as a blessed saint could do And here I should mention that the Lady Macadam when I told her of Nanse Bankss case enquired if she was a snuffer and being answered by me that she was her ladyship sent her a pretty French enamel box full of macabaw a fine snuff that she had in a bottle and among the macabaw was found a guinea at the bottom of the box after Nanse Banks had departed this life which was a kind thing of Lady Macadam to do
About the close of this year there was a great sough of old prophecies foretelling mutations and adversities chiefly on account of the canal that was spoken of to join the rivers of the Clyde and the Forth it being thought an impossible thing to be done and the Adam and Eve peartree in our garden budded out in an awful manner and had divers flourishes on it at Yule which was thought an ominous thing especially as the second Mrs Balwhidder was at the downlying with my eldest son Gilbert that is the merchant in Glasgow but nothing came ot and the howdie said she had an easy time when the child came into the world which was on the very last day of the year to the great satisfaction of me and of my people who were wonderful lifted up because their minister had a manchild born unto him
CHAPTER IX YEAR 1768
Its a surprising thing how time flieth away carrying off our youth and strength and leaving us nothing but wrinkles and the ails of old age Gilbert my son that is now a corpulent man and a Glasgow merchant when I take up my pen to record the memorables of this Ann Dom seems to me yet but a suckling in swaddling clothes mewing and peevish in the arms of his mother that has been long laid in the cold kirkyard beside her predecessor in Abrahams bosom It is not however my design to speak much anent my own affairs which would be a very improper and uncomely thing but only of what happened in the parish this book being for a witness and testimony of my ministry Therefore setting out of view both me and mine I will now resuscitate the concerns of Mrs Malcolm and her children for as I think never was there such a visible preordination seen in the lives of any persons as was seen in that of this worthy decent woman and her welldoing offspring Her morning was raw and a sore blight fell upon her fortunes but the sun looked out on her midday and her evening closed loun and warm and the stars of the firmament that are the eyes of heaven beamed as it were with gladness when she lay down to sleep the sleep of rest
Her son Charles was by this time grown up into a stout buirdly lad and it was expected that before the return of the Tobacco trader he would have been out of his time and a man afore the mast which was a great step of preferment as I heard say by persons skilled in seafaring concerns But this was not ordered to happen for when the Tobacco trader was lying in the harbour of Virginia in the North Americas a pressgang that was in need of men for a manofwar came on board and pressed poor Charles and sailed away with him on a cruise nobody for many a day could tell where till I thought of the Lord Eagleshams kindness His lordship having something to say with the kings government I wrote to him telling him who I was and how jocose he had been when buttoned in my clothes that he might recollect me thanking him at the same time for his condescension and patronage to Andrew Lanshaw in his way to the East Indies I then slipped in at the end of the letter a bit notabene concerning the case of Charles Malcolm begging his lordship on account of the poor lads widow mother to enquire at the government if they could tell us any thing about Charles In the due course of time I got a most civil reply from his lordship stating all about the name of the manofwar and where she was and at the conclusion his lordship said that I was lucky in having the brother of a Lord of the Admiralty on this occasion for my agent as otherwise from the vagueness of my statement the information might not have been procured which remark of his lordship was long a great riddle to me for I could not think what he meant about an agent till in the course of the year we heard that his own brother was concerned in the admiralty so that all his lordship meant was only to crack a joke with me and that he was ever ready and free to do as shall be related in the sequel for he was an excellent man
There being a vacancy for a schoolmistress it was proposed to Mrs Malcolm that under her superintendence her daughter Kate that had been learning great artifices in needlework so long with Lady Macadam should take up the school and the session undertook to make good to Kate the sum of five pounds sterling per annum over and above what the scholars were to pay But Mrs Malcolm said she had not strength herself to warsle with so many unruly brats and that Kate though a fine lassie was a tempestuous spirit and might lame some of the bairns in her passion and that selfsame night Lady Macadam wrote me a very complaining letter for trying to wile away her companion but her ladyship was a canaryheaded woman and given to flights and tantrums having in her youth been a great toast among the quality It would however have saved her from a sore heart had she never thought of keeping Kate Malcolm For this year her only son who was learning the art of war at an academy in France came to pay her his lady mother a visit He was a brisk and lighthearted stripling and Kate Malcolm was budding into a very rose of beauty so between them a hankering began which for a season was productive of great heaviness of heart to the poor old cripple lady indeed she assured me herself that all her rheumatics were nothing to the heartache which she suffered in the progress of this business But that will be more treated of hereafter suffice it to say for the present that we have thus recorded how the plan for making Kate Malcolm our schoolmistress came to nought It pleased however Him from whom cometh every good and perfect gift to send at this time among us a Miss Sabrina Hooky the daughter of old Mr Hooky who had been schoolmaster in a neighbouring parish She had gone after his death to live with an auntie in Glasgow that kept a shop in the Gallowgate It was thought that the old woman would have left her heir to all her gatherings and so she said she would but alas our life is but within our lip Before her testament was made she was carried suddenly off by an apoplectick an awful monument of the uncertainty of time and the nearness of eternity in her own shop as she was in the very act of weighing out an ounce of snuff to a professor of the College as Miss Sabrina herself told me Being thus destitute it happened that Miss Sabrina heard of the vacancy in our parish as it were just by the cry of a passing bird for she could not tell how although I judge myself that William Keckle the elder had a hand in it as he was at the time in Glasgow and she wrote me a wonderful wellpenned letter bespeaking the situation which letter came to hand on the morn following Lady Macadams stramash to me about Kate Malcolm and I laid it before the session the same day so that by the time her aunties concern was taken off her hands she had a home and a howf among us to come in to the which she lived upwards of thirty years in credit and respect although some thought she had not the art of her predecessor and was more uppish in her carriage than befitted the decorum of her vocation Hers however was but a harmless vanity and poor woman she needed all manner of graces to set her out for she was made up of odds and ends and had but one good eye the other being blind and just like a blue bead At first she plainly set her cap for Mr Lorimore but after oggling and goggling at him every Sunday in the kirk for a whole halfyear and more Miss Sabrina desisted in despair
But the most remarkable thing about her coming into the parish was the change that took place in Christian names among us Old Mr Hooky her father had from the time he read his Virgil maintained a sort of intromission with the nine muses by which he was led to baptize her Sabrina after a name mentioned by John Milton in one of his works Miss Sabrina began by calling our Jennies Jessies and our Nannies Nancies alas I have lived to see even these likewise grow oldfashioned She had also a taste in the mantuamaking line which she had learnt in Glasgow and I could date from the very Sabbath of her first appearance in the kirk a change growing in the garb of the younger lassies who from that day began to lay aside the silken plaidie over the head the which had been the pride and bravery of their grandmothers and instead of the snood that was so snod and simple they hided their heads in roundeared beescap mutches made of gauze and catgut and other curious contrivances of French millendery all which brought a deal of custom to Miss Sabrina over and above the incomings and Candlemas offerings of school insomuch that she saved money and in the course of three years had ten pounds to put in the bank
At the time these alterations and revolutions in the parish were thought a great advantage but now when I look back upon them as a traveller on the hill over the road he has passed I have my doubts For with wealth come wants like a troop of clamorous beggars at the heels of a generous man and its hard to tell wherein the benefit of improvement in a country parish consists especially to those who live by the sweat of their brow But it is not for me to make reflections my task and duty is to note the changes of time and habitudes
CHAPTER X YEAR 1769
I have my doubts whether it was in the beginning of this year or in the end of the last that a very extraordinary thing came to light in the parish but howsoever that may be there is nothing more certain than the fact which it is my duty to record I have mentioned already how it was that the toll or trustroad was set agoing on account of the Lord Eagleshams tumbling on the midden in the Vennel Well it happened to one of the labouring men in breaking the stones to make metal for the new road that he broke a stone that was both large and remarkable and in the heart of it which was boss there was found a living creature that jumped out the moment it saw the light of heaven to the great terrification of the man who could think it was nothing but an evil spirit that had been imprisoned therein for a time The man came to me like a demented creature and the whole clachan gathered out young and old and I went at their head to see what the miracle could be for the man said it was a fiery dragon spewing smoke and flames But when we came to the spot it was just a yird toad and the laddie weans nevelled it to death with stones before I could persuade them to give over Since then I have read of such things coming to light in the Scots Magazine a very valuable book
Soon after the affair of the wee deil in the stane as it was called a sough reached us that the Americas were seized with the rebellious spirit of the ten tribes and were snapping their fingers in the face of the kings government The news came on a Saturday night for we had no newspapers in those days and was brought by Robin Modiwort that fetched the letters from the Irville post Thomas Fullarton he has been dead many a day kept the grocery shop at Irville and he had been in at Glasgow as was his yearly custom to settle his accounts and to buy a hogshead of tobacco with sugar and other spiceries and being in Glasgow Thomas was told by the merchant of a great rise in tobacco that had happened by reason of the contumacity of the plantations and it was thought that blood would be spilt before things were ended for that the King and Parliament were in a great passion with them But as Charles Malcolm in the kings ship was the only one belonging to the parish that was likely to be art and part in the business we were in a manner little troubled at the time with this first gasp of the monster of war who for our sins was ordained to swallow up and devour so many of our fellowsubjects before he was bound again in the chains of mercy and peace
I had in the meantime written a letter to the Lord Eaglesham to get Charles Malcolm out of the clutches of the pressgang in the man ofwar and about a month after his lordship sent me an answer wherein was enclosed a letter from the captain of the ship saying that Charles Malcolm was so good a man that he was reluctant to part with him and that Charles himself was well contented to remain aboard Anent which his lordship said to me that he had written back to the captain to make a midshipman of Charles and that he would take him under his own protection which was great joy on two accounts to us all especially to his mother first to hear that Charles was a good man although in years still but a youth and secondly that my lord had of his own freewill taken him under the wing of his patronage
But the sweet of this world is never to be enjoyed without some of the sour The coal bark between Irville and Belfast in which Robert Malcolm the second son of his mother was serving his time to be a sailor got a charter as it was called to go with to Norway for deals which grieved Mrs Malcolm to the very heart for there was then no short cut by the canal as now is between the rivers of the Forth and Clyde but every ship was obligated to go far away round by the Orkneys which although a voyage in the summer not overly dangerous there being long days and short nights then yet in the winter it was far otherwise many vessels being frozen up in the Baltic till the spring and there was a story told at the time of an Irville bark coming home in the dead of the year that lost her way altogether and was supposed to have sailed north into utter darkness for she was never more heard of and many an awful thing was said of what the auld mariners about the shore thought concerning the crew of that misfortunate vessel However Mrs Malcolm was a woman of great faith and having placed her reliance on Him who is the orphans stay and widows trust she resigned her bairn into his hands with a religious submission to his pleasure though the mothers tear of weak human nature was on her cheek and in her ee And her faith was well rewarded for the vessel brought him safe home and he had seen such a world of things that it was just to read a storybook to hear him tell of Elsineur and Gottenburg and other fine and great places that we had never heard of till that time and he brought me a bottle of Riga balsam which for healing cuts was just miraculous besides a clear bottle of Rososolus for his mother a spirit which for cordiality could not be told for though since that time we have had many a sort of Dantzic cordial I have never tasted any to compare with Robin Malcolms Rososolus The Lady Macadam who had a knowledge of such things declared it was the best of the best sort for Mrs Malcolm sent her ladyship some of it in a doctors bottle as well as to Mrs Balwhidder who was then at the downlying with our daughter Janet—a woman now in the married state that makes a most excellent wife having been brought up with great pains and well educated as I shall have to record byandby
About the Christmas of this year Lady Macadams son having been perfected in the art of war at a school in France had with the help of his mothers friends and his fathers fame got a stand of colours in the Royal Scots regiment he came to show himself in his regimentals to his lady mother like a dutiful son as he certainly was It happened that he was in the kirk in his scarlets and gold on the same Sunday that Robert Malcolm came home from the long voyage to Norway for deals and I thought when I saw the soldier and the sailor from the pulpit that it was an omen of war among our harmless country folks like swords and cannon amidst ploughs and sickles coming upon us and I became laden in spirit and had a most weighty prayer upon the occasion which was long after remembered many thinking when the American war broke out that I had been gifted with a glimmering of prophecy on that day
It was during this visit to his lady mother that young Laird Macadam settled the correspondence with Kate Malcolm which in the process of time caused us all so much trouble for it was a clandestine concern but the time is not yet ripe for me to speak of it more at large I should however mention before concluding this annal that Mrs Malcolm herself was this winter brought to deaths door by a terrible host that came on her in the kirk by taking a kittling in her throat It was a terrification to hear her sometimes but she got the better of it in the spring and was more herself thereafter than she had been for years before and her daughter Effie or Euphemia as she was called by Miss Sabrina the schoolmistress was growing up to be a gleg and clever quean she was indeed such a spirit in her way that the folks called her Spunkie while her son William that was the youngest of the five was making a wonderful proficiency with Mr Lorimore He was indeed a douce welldoing laddie of a composed nature insomuch that the master said he was surely chosen for the ministry In short the more I think on what befell this family and of the great meekness and Christian worth of the parent I verily believe there never could have been in any parish such a manifestation of the truth that they who put their trust in the Lord are sure of having a friend that will never forsake them
CHAPTER XI YEAR 1770
This blessed Ann Dom was one of the Sabbaths of my ministry When I look back upon it all is quiet and good order the darkest cloud of the smuggling had passed over at least from my people and the rumours of rebellion in America were but like the distant sound of the bars of Ayr We sat as it were in a lown and pleasant place beholding our prosperity like the appletree adorned with her garlands of flourishes in the first fair mornings of the spring when the birds were returning thanks to their Maker for the coming again of the seedtime and the busy bee goeth forth from her cell to gather honey from the flowers of the field and the broom of the hill and the bluebells and gowans which Nature with a gracious and a gentle hand scatters in the valley as she walketh forth in her beauty to testify to the goodness of the Father of all mercies
Both at the spring and the harvest sacraments the weather was as that which is in Paradise there was a glad composure in all hearts and the minds of men were softened towards each other The number of communicants was greater than had been known for many years and the tables were filled by the pious from many a neighbouring parish those of my hearers who had opposed my placing declared openly for a testimony of satisfaction and holy thankfulness that the tent so surrounded as it was on both occasions was a sight they never had expected to see I was to be sure assisted by some of the best divines then in the land but I had not been a sluggard myself in the vineyard
Often when I think on this year so fruitful in pleasant intimacies has the thought come into my mind that as the Lord blesses the earth from time to time with a harvest of more than the usual increase so in like manner he is sometimes for a season pleased to pour into the breasts of mankind a larger portion of goodwill and charity disposing them to love one another to be kindly to all creatures and filled with the delight of thankfulness to himself which is the greatest of blessings
It was in this year that the Earl of Eaglesham ordered the fair to be established in the village and it was a day of wonderful festivity to all the bairns and lads and lassies for miles round I think indeed that there has never been such a fair as the first since for although we have more mountebanks and merryandrews now and richer cargoes of groceries and packmans stands yet there has been a falling off in the lighthearted daffing while the hobleshows in the changehouses have been awfully augmented It was on this occasion that Punchs opera was first seen in our country side and surely never was there such a funny curiosity for although Mr Punch himself was but a timber idol he was as droll as a true living thing and napped with his head so comical but oh he was a sorrowful contumacious captain and it was just a sport to see how he rampaged and triumphed and sang For months after the laddie weans did nothing but squeak and sing like Punch In short a blithe spirit was among us throughout this year and the briefness of the chronicle bears witness to the innocency of the time
CHAPTER XII YEAR 1771
It was in this year that my troubles with Lady Macadams affair began She was a woman as I have by hint here and there intimated of a prelatic disposition seeking all things her own way and not overly scrupulous about the means which I take to be the true humour of prelacy She was come of a high episcopal race in the east country where sound doctrine had been long but little heard and she considered the comely humility of a presbyter as the wickedness of hypocrisy so that saving in the way of neighbourly visitation there was no sincere communion between us Nevertheless with all her vagaries she had the element of a kindly spirit that would sometimes kythe in actions of charity that showed symptoms of a true Christian grace had it been properly cultivated but her morals had been greatly neglected in her youth and she would waste her precious time in the long winter nights playing at the cards with her visitors in the which thriftless and sinful pastime she was at great pains to instruct Kate Malcolm which I was grieved to understand What however I most misliked in her ladyship was a lightness and juvenility of behaviour altogether unbecoming her years for she was far past threescore having been long married without children Her son the soldier officer came so late that it was thought she would have been taken up as an evidence in the Douglas cause She was to be sure crippled with the rheumatics and no doubt the time hung heavy on her hands but the best friends of recreation and sport must allow that an old woman sitting whole hours jingling with that paralytic chattel a spinnet was not a natural object What then could be said for her singing Italian songs and getting all the newest from Vauxhall in London a boxful at a time with new novelbooks and trinkumtrankum flowers and feathers and sweetmeats sent to her by a lady of the blood royal of Paris As for the music she was at great pains to instruct Kate which with the other things she taught were sufficient as my lady said herself to qualify poor Kate for a duchess or a governess in either of which capacities her ladyship assured Mrs Malcolm she would do honour to her instructor meaning her own self but I must come to the point anent the affair
One evening early in the month of January as I was sitting by myself in my closet studying the Scots Magazine which I well remember the new number had come but that very night Mrs Balwhidder being at the time busy with the lasses in the kitchen and superintending as her custom was for she was a clever woman a great woolspinning we then had both little wheel and meikle wheel for stockings and blankets—sitting as I was saying in the study with the fire well gathered up for a nights reflection a prodigious knocking came to the door by which the book was almost startled out of my hand and all the wheels in the house were silenced at once This was her ladyships flunkey to beg me to go to her whom he described as in a state of desperation Christianity required that I should obey the summons so with what haste I could thinking that perhaps as she had been lowspirited for some time about the young lairds going to the Indies she might have got a cast of grace and been wakened in despair to the state of darkness in which she had so long lived I made as few steps of the road between the manse and her house as it was in my ability to do
On reaching the door I found a great light in the house—candles burning up stairs and down stairs and a sough of something extraordinar going on I went into the diningroom where her ladyship was wont to sit but she was not there—only Kate Malcolm all alone busily picking bits of paper from the carpet When she looked up I saw that her eyes were red with weeping and I was alarmed and said Katy my dear I hope there is no danger Upon which the poor lassie rose and flinging herself in a chair covered her face with her hands and wept bitterly
What is the old fool doing with the wench cried a sharp angry voice from the drawingroom—why does not he come to me It was the voice of Lady Macadam herself and she meant me So I went to her but oh she was in a far different state from what I had hoped The pride of this world had got the upper hand of her and was playing dreadful antics with understanding There was she painted like a Jezebel with gumflowers on her head as was her custom every afternoon sitting on a settee for she was lame and in her hand she held a letter Sir said she as I came into the room I want you to go instantly to that young fellow your clerk meaning Mr Lorimore the schoolmaster who was likewise session clerk and precentor and tell him I will give him a couple of hundred pounds to marry Miss Malcolm without delay and undertake to procure him a living from some of my friends
Softly my lady you must first tell me the meaning of all this haste of kindness said I in my calm methodical manner At the which she began to cry and sob like a petted bairn and to bewail her ruin and the dishonour of her family I was surprised and beginning to be confounded at length out it came The flunkey had that night brought two London letters from the Irville post and Kate Malcolm being out of the way when he came home he took them both in to her ladyship on the silver server as was his custom and her ladyship not jealousing that Kate could have a correspondence with London thought both the letters were for herself for they were franked so as it happened she opened the one that was for Kate and this too from the young laird her own son She could not believe her eyes when she saw the first words in his hand of write and she read and she better read till she read all the letter by which she came to know that Kate and her darling were trysted and that this was not the first loveletter which had passed between them She therefore tore it in pieces and sent for me and screamed for Kate in short went as it were off at the head and was neither to bind nor to hold on account of this intrigue as she in her wrath stigmatised the innocent gallanting of poor Kate and the young laird
I listened in patience to all she had to say anent the discovery and offered her the very best advice but she derided my judgment and because I would not speak outright to Mr Lorimore and get him to marry Kate off hand she bade me goodnight with an air and sent for him herself He however was on the brink of marriage with his present worthy helpmate and declined her ladyships proposals which angered her still more But although there was surely a great lack of discretion in all this and her ladyship was entirely overcome with her passion she would not part with Kate nor allow her to quit the house with me but made her sup with her as usual that night calling her sometimes a perfidious baggage and at other times forgetting her delirium speaking to her as kindly as ever At night Kate as usual helped her ladyship into her bed this she told me with tears in her eyes next morning and when Lady Macadam as was her wont bent to kiss her for goodnight she suddenly recollected the intrigue and gave Kate such a slap on the side of the head as quite dislocated for a time the intellects of the poor young lassie Next morning Kate was solemnly advised never to write again to the laird while the lady wrote him a letter which she said would be as good as a birch to the breech of the boy Nothing therefore for some time indeed throughout the year came of the matter but her ladyship when Mrs Balwhidder soon after called on her said that I was a noseofwax and that she never would speak to me again which surely was not a polite thing to say to Mrs Balwhidder my second wife
This stramash was the first time I had interposed in the family concerns of my people for it was against my nature to make or meddle with private actions saving only such as in course of nature came before the session but I was not satisfied with the principles of Lady Macadam and I began to be weary about Kate Malcolms situation with her ladyship whose ways of thinking I saw were not to be depended on especially in those things wherein her pride and vanity were concerned But the time ran on—the butterflies and the blossoms were succeeded by the leaves and the fruit and nothing of a particular nature farther molested the general tranquillity of this year about the end of which there came on a sudden frost after a tack of wet weather The roads were just a sheet of ice like a frozen river insomuch that the coalcarts could not work and one of our cows Mrs Balwhidder said after the accident it was our best but it was not so much thought of before fell in coming from the glebe to the byre and broke its two hinder legs which obligated us to kill it in order to put the beast out of pain As this happened after we had salted our mart it occasioned us to have a double crop of puddings and such a show of hams in the kitchen as was a marvel to our visitors to see
CHAPTER XIII YEAR 1772
On NewYears night this year a thing happened which in its own nature was a trifle but it turned out as a mustardseed that grows into a great tree One of the elders who has long been dead and gone came to the manse about a fact that was found out in the clachan and after we had discoursed on it some time he rose to take his departure I went with him to the door with the candle in my hand—it was a clear frosty night with a sharp wind and the moment I opened the door the blast blew out the candle so that I heedlessly with the candlestick in my hand walked with him to the yett without my hat by which I took a sore cold in my head that brought on a dreadful toothache insomuch that I was obligated to go into Irville to get the tooth drawn and this caused my face to swell to such a fright that on the Sabbathday I could not preach to my people There was however at that time a young man one Mr Heckletext tutor in Sir Hugh Montgomeries family and who had shortly before been licensed Finding that I would not be able to preach myself I sent to him and begged he would officiate for me which he very pleasantly consented to do being like all the young clergy thirsting to show his light to the world Twixt the fore and afternoons worship he took his check of dinner at the manse and I could not but say that he seemed both discreet and sincere Judge however what was brewing when the same night Mr Lorimore came and told me that Mr Heckletext was the suspected person anent the fact that had been instrumental in the hand of a chastising Providence to afflict me with the toothache in order as it afterwards came to pass to bring the hidden hypocrisy of the ungodly preacher to light It seems that the donsie lassie who was in fault had gone to the kirk in the afternoon and seeing who was in the pulpit where she expected to see me was seized with the hysterics and taken with her crying on the spot the which being untimely proved the death of both mother and bairn before the thing was properly laid to the fathers charge
This caused a great uproar in the parish I was sorely blamed to let such a man as Mr Heckletext go up into my pulpit although I was as ignorant of his offences as the innocent child that perished and in an unguarded hour to pacify some of the elders who were just distracted about the disgrace I consented to have him called before the session He obeyed the call and in a manner that I will never forget for he was a sorrow of sin and audacity and demanded to know why and for what reason he was summoned I told him the whole affair in my calm and moderate way but it was oil cast upon a burning coal He flamed up in a terrible passion threepit at the elders that they had no proof whatever of his having had any trafficking in the business which was the case for it was only a notion the poor deceased lassie never having made a disclosure called them libellous conspirators against his character which was his only fortune and concluded by threatening to punish them though he exempted me from the injury which their slanderous insinuations had done to his prospects in life We were all terrified and allowed him to go away without uttering a word and sure enough he did bring a plea in the courts of Edinburgh against Mr Lorimore and the elders for damages laid at a great sum
What might have been the consequence no one can tell but soon after he married Sir Hughs housekeeper and went with her into Edinburgh where he took up a school and before the trial came on that is to say within three months of the day that I myself married them Mrs Heckletext was delivered of a thriving lad bairn which would have been a witness for the elders had the worst come to the worst This was indeed we all thought a joyous deliverance to the parish and it was a lesson to me never to allow any preacher to mount my pulpit unless I knew something of his moral character
In other respects this year passed very peaceably in the parish there was a visible increase of worldly circumstances and the hedges which had been planted along the tollroad began to put forth their branches and to give new notions of orderlyness and beauty to the farmers Mrs Malcolm heard from time to time from her son Charles on board the manofwar the Avenger where he was midshipman and he had found a friend in the captain that was just a father to him Her second son Robert being out of his time at Irville went to the Clyde to look for a berth and was hired to go to Jamaica in a ship called the Trooper He was a lad of greater sobriety of nature than Charles douce honest and faithful and when he came home though he brought no limes to me to make punch like his brother he brought a Muscovy duck to Lady Macadam who had as I have related in a manner educated his sister Kate That duck was the first of the kind we had ever seen and many thought it was of the goose species only with short bowly legs It was however a tractable and homely beast and after some confabulation as my lady herself told Mrs Balwhidder it was received into fellowship by her other ducks and poultry It is not however so much on account of the rarity of the creature that I have introduced it here as for the purpose of relating a wonderful operation that was performed on it by Miss Sabrina the schoolmistress
There happened to be a sack of beans in our stable and Lady Macadams hens and fowls which were not overly fed at home through the inattention of her servants being great stravaigers for their meat in passing the door went in to pick and the Muscovy seeing a hole in the beansack dabbled out a crapful before she was disturbed The beans swelled on the poor birds stomach and her crap bellied out like the kyte of a Glasgow magistrate until it was just a sight to be seen with its head back on its shoulders The bairns of the clachan followed it up and down crying the ladys muckle jocks aye growing bigger till every heart was wae for the creature Some thought it was afflicted with a tympathy and others that it was the natural way for suchlike ducks to cleck their young In short we were all concerned and my lady having a great opinion of Miss Sabrinas skill had a consultation with her on the case at which Miss Sabrina advised that what she called the Caesarean operation should be tried which she herself performed accordingly by opening the creatures crap and taking out as many beans as filled a mutchkin stoup after which she sewed it up and the Muscovy went its way to the waterside and began to swim and was as jocund as ever insomuch that in three days after it was quite cured of all the consequences of its surfeit
I had at one time a notion to send an account of this to the Scots Magazine but something always came in the way to prevent me so that it has been reserved for a place in this chronicle being after Mr Heckletexts affair the most memorable thing in our history of this year
CHAPTER XIV YEAR 1773
In this Ann Dom there was something like a plea getting to a head between the session and some of the heritors about a new school house the thatch having been torn from the rigging of the old one by a blast of wind on the first Monday of February by which a great snow storm got admission and the school was rendered utterly uninhabitable The smaller sort of lairds were very willing to come into the plan with an extra contribution because they respected the master and their bairns were at the school but the gentlemen who had tutors in their own houses were not so manageable and some of them even went so far as to say that the kirk being only wanted on Sunday would do very well for a school all the rest of the week which was a very profane way of speaking and I was resolved to set myself against any such thing and to labour according to the power and efficacy of my station to get a new school built
Many a meeting the session had on the subject and the heritors debated and discussed and revised their proceedings and still no money for the needful work was forthcoming Whereupon it happened one morning as I was rummaging in my scrutoire that I laid my hand on the Lord Eagleshams letter anent Charles Malcolm and it was put into my head at that moment that if I was to write to his lordship who was the greatest heritor and owned now the major part of the parish that by his help and influence I might be an instrument to the building of a comfortable new school Accordingly I sat down and wrote my lord all about the accident and the state of the schoolhouse and the divisions and seditions among the heritors and sent the letter to him at London by the post the same day without saying a word to any living soul on the subject
This in me was an advised thought for by the return of post his lordship with his own hand in a most kind manner authorized me to say that he would build a new school at his own cost and bade me go over and consult about it with his steward at the castle to whom he had written by the same post the necessary instructions Nothing could exceed the gladness which the news gave to the whole parish and none said more in behalf of his lordships bounty and liberality than the heritors especially those gentry who grudged the undertaking when it was thought that it would have to come out of their own pocknook
In the course of the summer just as the roof was closing in of the schoolhouse my lord came to the castle with a great company and was not there a day till he sent for me to come over on the next Sunday to dine with him but I sent him word that I could not do so for it would be a transgression of the Sabbath which made him send his own gentleman to make his apology for having taken so great a liberty with me and to beg me to come on the Monday which I accordingly did and nothing could be better than the discretion with which I was used There was a vast company of English ladies and gentlemen and his lordship in a most jocose manner told them all how he had fallen on the midden and how I had clad him in my clothes and there was a wonder of laughing and diversion but the most particular thing in the company was a large roundfaced man with a wig that was a dignitary in some great Episcopalian church in London who was extraordinary condescending towards me drinking wine with me at the table and saying weighty sentences in a fine style of language about the becoming grace of simplicity and innocence of heart in the clergy of all denominations of Christians which I was pleased to hear for really he had a proud red countenance and I could not have thought he was so mortified to humility within had I not heard with what sincerity he delivered himself and seen how much reverence and attention was paid to him by all present particularly by my lords chaplain who was a pious and pleasant young divine though educated at Oxford for the Episcopalian persuasion
One day soon after as I was sitting in my closet conning a sermon for the next Sunday I was surprised by a visit from the dean as the dignitary was called He had come he said to wait on me as rector of the parish—for so it seems they call a pastor in England—and to say that if it was agreeable he would take a family dinner with us before he left the castle I could make no objection to this kindness but said I hoped my lord would come with him and that we would do our best to entertain them with all suitable hospitality About an hour or so after he had returned to the castle one of the flunkeys brought a letter from his lordship to say that not only he would come with the dean but that they would bring his other guests with them and that as they could only drink London wine the butler would send me a hamper in the morning assured as he was pleased to say that Mrs Balwhidder would otherwise provide good cheer
This notification however was a great trouble to my wife who was only used to manufacture the produce of our glebe and yard to a profitable purpose and not used to the treatment of deans and lords and other persons of quality However she was determined to stretch a point on this occasion and we had as all present declared a charming dinner for fortunately one of the sows had a litter of pigs a few days before and in addition to a goose that is but a boss bird we had a roasted pig with an apple in its mouth which was just a curiosity to see and my lord called it a tithe pig but I told him it was one of Mrs Balwhidders own clecking which saying of mine made no little sport when expounded to the dean
But och how this was the last happy summer that we had for many a year in the parish and an omen of the dule that ensued was in a sacrilegious theft that a daft woman Jenny Gaffaw and her idiot daughter did in the kirk by tearing off and stealing the green serge lining of my lords pew to make as they said a hap for their shoulders in the cold weather—saving however the sin we paid no attention at the time to the mischief and tribulation that so unheardof a trespass boded to us all It took place about Yule when the weather was cold and frosty and poor Jenny was not very able to go about seeking her meat as usual The deed however was mainly done by her daughter who when brought before me said her poor mothers back had mair need of claes than the kirkboards which was so true a thing that I could not punish her but wrote anent it to my lord who not only overlooked the offence but sent orders to the servants at the castle to be kind to the poor woman and the natural her daughter
CHAPTER XV YEAR 1774
When I look back on this year and compare what happened therein with the things that had gone before I am grieved to the heart and pressed down with an afflicted spirit We had as may be read trials and tribulations in the days that were past and in the rank and boisterous times of the smuggling there was much sin and blemish among us but nothing so dark and awful as what fell out in the course of this unhappy year The evil omen of daft Jenny Gaffaw and her daughters sacrilege had soon a bloody verification
About the beginning of the month of March in this year the war in America was kindling so fast that the government was obligated to send soldiers over the sea in the hope to quell the rebellious temper of the plantations and a party of a regiment that was quartered at Ayr was ordered to march to Greenock to be there shipped off The men were wild and wicked profligates without the fear of the Lord before their eyes and some of them had drawn up with light women in Ayr who followed them on their march This the soldiers did not like not wishing to be troubled with such gear in America so the women when they got the length of Kilmarnock were ordered to retreat and go home which they all did but one Jean Glaikit who persisted in her intent to follow her joe Patrick ONeil a Catholic Irish corporal The man did as he said all in his capacity to persuade her to return but she was a contumacious limmer and would not listen to reason so that in passing along our tollroad from less to more the miserable wretches fell out and fought and the soldier put an end to her with a hasty knock on the head with his firelock and marched on after his comrades
The body of the woman was about half an hour after found by the scholars of Mr Lorimores school who had got the play to see the marching and to hear the drums of the soldiers Dreadful was the shout and the cry throughout the parish at this foul work Some of the farmer lads followed the soldiers on horseback and others ran to Sir Hugh who was a justice of the peace for his advice—Such a day as that was
However the murderer was taken and with his arms tied behind him with a cord he was brought back to the parish where he confessed before Sir Hugh the deed and how it happened He was then put in a cart and being well guarded by six of the lads was taken to Ayr jail
It was not long after this that the murderer was brought to trial and being found guilty on his own confession he was sentenced to be executed and his body to be hung in chains near the spot where the deed was done I thought that all in the parish would have run to desperation with horror when the news of this came and I wrote immediately to the Lord Eaglesham to get this done away by the merciful power of the government which he did to our great solace and relief
In the autumn the young Laird Macadam being ordered with his regiment for the Americas got leave from the king to come and see his lady mother before his departure But it was not to see her only as will presently appear
Knowing how much her ladyship was averse to the notion he had of Kate Malcolm he did not write of his coming lest she would send Kate out of the way but came in upon them at a late hour as they were wasting their precious time as was the nightly wont of my lady with a pack of cards and so far was she from being pleased to see him that no sooner did she behold his face but like a tap of tow she kindled upon both him and Kate and ordered them out of her sight and house The young folk had discretion Kate went home to her mother and the laird came to the manse and begged us to take him in He then told me what had happened and that having bought a captains commission he was resolved to marry Kate and hoped I would perform the ceremony if her mother would consent As for mine said he she will never agree but when the thing is done her pardon will not be difficult to get for with all her whims and caprice she is generous and affectionate In short he so wiled and beguiled me that I consented to marry them if Mrs Malcolm was agreeable I will not disobey my mother said he by asking her consent which I know she will refuse and therefore the sooner it is done the better So we then stepped over to Mrs Malcolms house where we found that saintly woman with Kate and Effie and Willie sitting peacefully at their fireside preparing to read their Bibles for the night When we went in and when I saw Kate that was so ladylike there with the decent humility of her parents dwelling I could not but think she was destined for a better station and when I looked at the captain a handsome youth I thought surely their marriage is made in heaven and so I said to Mrs Malcolm who after a time consented and likewise agreed that her daughter should go with the captain to America for her faith and trust in the goodness of Providence was great and boundless striving as it were to be even with its tender mercies Accordingly the captains man was sent to bid the chaise wait that had taken him to the ladys and the marriage was sanctified by me before we left Mrs Malcolms No doubt they ought to have been proclaimed three several Sabbaths but I satisfied the session at our first meeting on account of the necessity of the case The young couple went in the chaise travelling to Glasgow authorising me to break the matter to Lady Macadam which was a sore task but I was spared from the performance For her ladyship had come to herself and thinking on her own rashness in sending away Kate and the captain in the way she had done she was like one by herself All the servants were scattered out and abroad in quest of the lovers and some of them seeing the chaise drive from Mrs Malcolms door with them in it and me coming out jealoused what had been done and told their mistress outright of the marriage which was to her like a clap of thunder insomuch that she flung herself back in her settee and was beating and drumming with her heels on the floor like a madwoman in Bedlam when I entered the room For some time she took no notice of me but continued her din but byand by she began to turn her eyes in fiery glances upon me till I was terrified lest she would fly at me with her claws in her fury At last she stopped all at once and in a calm voice said But it cannot now be helped where are the vagabonds—They are gone replied I—Gone cried she gone where—To America I suppose was my answer upon which she again threw herself back in the settee and began again to drum and beat with her feet as before But not to dwell on small particularities let it suffice to say that she sent her coachman on one of her coach horses which being old and stiff did not overtake the fugitives till they were in their bed at Kilmarnock where they stopped that night but when they came back to the ladys in the morning she was as cagey and meikle taken up with them as if they had gotten her full consent and privilege to marry from the first Thus was the first of Mrs Malcolms children well and creditably settled I have only now to conclude with observing that my son Gilbert was seized with the smallpox about the beginning of December and was blinded by them for seventeen days for the inoculation was not in practice yet among us saving only in the genteel families that went into Edinburgh for the education of their children where it was performed by the faculty there
CHAPTER XVI YEAR 1775
The regular course of nature is calm and orderly and tempests and troubles are but lapses from the accustomed sobriety with which Providence works out the destined end of all things From Yule till PaceMonday there had been a gradual subsidence of our personal and parochial tribulations and the spring though late set in bright and beautiful and was accompanied with the spirit of contentment so that excepting the great concern that we all began to take in the American rebellion especially on account of Charles Malcolm that was in the manofwar and of Captain Macadam that had married Kate we had throughout the better half of the year but little molestation of any sort I should however note the upshot of the marriage
By some cause that I do not recollect if I ever had it properly told the regiment wherein the captain had bought his commission was not sent to the plantations but only over to Ireland by which the captain and his lady were allowed to prolong their stay in the parish with his mother and he coming of age while he was among us in making a settlement on his wife bought the house at the Braehead which was then just built by Thomas Shivers the mason and he gave that house with a judicious income to Mrs Malcolm telling her that it was not becoming he having it in his power to do the contrary that she should any longer be dependent on her own industry For this the young man got a name like a sweet odour in all the country side but that whimsical and prelatic lady his mother just went out of all bounds and played such pranks for an old woman as cannot be told To her daughterinlaw however she was wonderful kind and in fitting her out for going with the captain to Dublin it was extraordinary to hear what a paraphernalia she provided her with But who could have thought that in this kindness a sore trial was brewing for me
It happened that Miss Betty Wudrife the daughter of an heritor had been on a visit to some of her friends in Edinburgh and being in at Edinburgh she came out with a fine mantle decked and adorned with many a ribbonknot such as had never been seen in the parish The Lady Macadam hearing of this grand mantle sent to beg Miss Betty to lend it to her to make a copy for young Mrs Macadam But Miss Betty was so vogie with her gay mantle that she sent back word it would be making it oer common which so nettled the old courtly lady that she vowed revenge and said the mantle would not be long seen on Miss Betty Nobody knew the meaning of her words but she sent privately for Miss Sabrina the schoolmistress who was aye proud of being invited to my ladys where she went on the Sabbath night to drink tea and read Thomsons SEASONS and Herveys MEDITATIONS for her ladyships recreation Between the two a secret plot was laid against Miss Betty and her Edinburgh mantle and Miss Sabrina in a very treacherous manner for the which I afterwards chided her severely went to Miss Betty and got a sight of the mantle and how it was made and all about it until she was in a capacity to make another like it by which my lady and her from old silk and satin negligees which her ladyship had worn at the French court made up two mantles of the selfsame fashion as Miss Bettys and if possible more sumptuously garnished but in a flagrant fool way On the Sunday morning after her ladyship sent for Jenny Gaffaw and her daft daughter Meg and showed them the mantles and said she would give then halfacrown if they would go with them to the kirk and take their place in the bench beside the elders and after worship walk home before Miss Betty Wudrife The two poor natural things were just transported with the sight of such bravery and needed no other bribe so over their bits of ragged duds they put on the pageantry and walked away to the kirk like peacocks and took their place on the bench to the great diversion of the whole congregation
I had no suspicion of this and had prepared an affecting discourse about the horrors of war in which I touched with a tender hand on the troubles that threatened families and kindred in America but all the time I was preaching doing my best and expatiating till the tears came into my eyes I could not divine what was the cause of the inattention of my people But the two vain haverels were on the bench under me and I could not see them where they sat spreading their feathers and picking their wings stroking down and setting right their finery with such an air as no living soul could see and withstand while every eye in the kirk was now on them and now at Miss Betty Wudrife who was in a worse situation than if she had been on the stool of repentance
Greatly grieved with the little heed that was paid to my discourse I left the pulpit with a heavy heart but when I came out into the kirkyard and saw the two antics linking like ladies and aye keeping in the way before Miss Betty and looking back and around in their pride and admiration with high heads and a wonderful pomp I was really overcome and could not keep my gravity but laughed loud out among the graves and in the face of all my people who seeing how I was vanquished in that unguarded moment by my enemy made a universal and most unreverent breach of all decorum at which Miss Betty who had been the cause of all ran into the first open door and almost fainted away with mortification
This affair was regarded by the elders as a sinful trespass on the orderlyness that was needful in the Lords house and they called on me at the manse that night and said it would be a guilty connivance if I did not rebuke and admonish Lady Macadam of the evil of her way for they had questioned daft Jenny and had got at the bottom of the whole plot and mischief But I who knew her ladyships light way would fain have had the elders to overlook it rather than expose myself to her tantrums but they considered the thing as a great scandal so I was obligated to conform to their wishes I might however have as well stayed at home for her ladyship was in one of her jocose humours when I went to speak to her on the subject and it was so far from my power to make a proper impression on her of the enormity that had been committed that she made me laugh in spite of my reason at the fantastical drollery of her malicious prank on Miss Betty Wudrife
It however did not end here for the session knowing that it was profitless to speak to the daft mother and daughter who had been the instruments gave orders to Willy Howking the betheral not to let them again so far into the kirk and Willy having scarcely more sense than them both thought proper to keep them out next Sunday altogether The twa said nothing at the time but the adversary was busy with them for on the Wednesday following there being a meeting of the synod at Ayr to my utter amazement the mother and daughter made their appearance there in all their finery and raised a complaint against me and the session for debarring them from church privileges No stage play could have produced such an effect I was perfectly dumfoundered and every member of the synod might have been tied with a straw they were so overcome with this new device of that endless woman when bent on provocation—the Lady Macadam in whom the saying was verified that old folk are twice bairns for in such plays pranks and projects she was as playrife as a very lassie at her sampler and this is but a swatch to what lengths she would go The complaint was dismissed by which the session and me were assoilzied but Ill never forget till the day of my death what I suffered on that occasion to be so put to the wall by two born idiots
CHAPTER XVII YEAR 1776
It belongs to the chroniclers of the realm to describe the damage and detriment which fell on the power and prosperity of the kingdom by reason of the rebellion that was fired into open war against the name and authority of the king in the plantations of America for my task is to describe what happened within the narrow bound of the pasturage of the Lords flock of which in his bounty and mercy he made me the humble willing but alas the weak and ineffectual shepherd
About the month of February a recruiting party came to our neighbour town of Irville to beat up for men to be soldiers against the rebels and thus the battle was brought as it were to our gates for the very first man that took on with them was one Thomas Wilson a cottar in our clachan who up to that time had been a decent and creditable character He was at first a farmer lad but had forgathered with a doited tawpy whom he married and had offspring three or four For some time it was noticed that he had a down and thoughtful look that his cleeding was growing bare and that his wife kept an untrig house which it was feared by many was the cause of Thomas going oer often to the changehouse he was in short during the greater part of the winter evidently a man foregone in the pleasures of this world which made all that knew him compassionate his situation
No doubt it was his household ills that burdened him past bearing and made him go into Irville when he heard of the recruiting and take on to be a soldier Such a wallywallying as the news of this caused at every door for the redcoats—from the persecuting days when the blackcuffs rampaged through the country—soldiers that fought for hire were held in dread and as a horror among us and terrible were the stories that were told of their cruelty and sinfulness indeed there had not been wanting in our time a sample of what they were as witness the murder of Jean Glaikit by Patrick ONeil the Irish corporal anent which I have treated at large in the memorables of the year 1774
A meeting of the session was forthwith held for here was Thomas Wilsons wife and all his weans an awful cess thrown upon the parish and it was settled outright among us that Mr Docken who was then an elder but is since dead a worthy man with a soft tongue and a pleasing manner should go to Irville and get Thomas if possible released from the recruiters But it was all in vain the sergeant would not listen to him for Thomas was a strapping lad nor would the poor infatuated man himself agree to go back but cursed like a cadger and swore that if he stayed any longer among his plagues he would commit some rash act so we were saddled with his family which was the first taste and preeing of what war is when it comes into our hearths and among the breadwinners
The evil however did not stop here Thomas when he was dressed out in the kings clothes came over to see his bairns and take a farewell of his friends and he looked so gallant that the very next marketday another lad of the parish listed with him but he was a ramplor roving sort of a creature and upon the whole it was thought he did well for the parish when he went to serve the king
The listing was a catching distemper Before the summer was over the other three of the farming lads went off with the drum and there was a wailing in the parish which made me preach a touching discourse I likened the parish to a widow woman with a small family sitting in her cottage by the fireside herself spinning with an eident wheel ettling her best to get them a bit and a brat and the poor weans all canty about the hearthstane—the little ones at their playocks and the elder at their tasks—the callans working with hooks and lines to catch them a meal of fish in the morning— and the lassies working stockings to sell at the next Marymas fair And then I likened war to a calamity coming among them—the callans drowned at their fishing—the lassies led to a misdoing—and the feckless wee bairns laid on the bed of sickness and their poor forlorn mother sitting by herself at the embers of a cauldrife fire her tow done and no a bodle to buy more drooping a silent and salt tear for her babies and thinking of days that war gone and like Rachel weeping for her children she would not be comforted With this I concluded for my own heart filled full with the thought and there was a deep sob in the Church verily it was Rachel weeping for her children
In the latter end of the year the manofwar with Charles Malcolm in her came to the tail of the Bank at Greenock to press men as it was thought and Charles got leave from his captain to come and see his mother and he brought with him Mr Howard another midshipman the son of a great parliament man in London which as we have tasted the sorrow gave us some insight into the pomp of war Charles was now grown up into a fine young man rattling light hearted and just a cordial of gladness and his companion was every bit like him They were dressed in their fine goldlaced garbs and nobody knew Charles when he came to the clachan but all wondered for they were on horseback and rode to the house where his mother lived when he went away but which was then occupied by Miss Sabrina and her school Miss Sabrina had never seen Charles but she had heard of him and when he enquired for his mother she guessed who he was and showed him the way to the new house that the captain had bought for her
Miss Sabrina who was a little overly perjink at times behaved herself on this occasion with a true spirit and gave her lassies the play immediately so that the news of Charless return was spread by them like wildfire and there was a wonderful joy in the whole town When Charles had seen his mother and his sister Effie with that douce and wellmannered lad William his brother—for of their meeting I cannot speak not being present—he then came with his friend to see me at the manse and was most jocose with me and in a way of great pleasance got Mrs Balwhidder to ask his friend to sleep at the manse In short we had just a ploy the whole two days they stayed with us and I got leave from Lord Eagleshams steward to let them shoot on my lords land and I believe every laddie wean in the parish attended them to the field As for old Lady Macadam Charles being as she said a near relation and she having likewise some knowledge of his comrades family she was just in her element with them though they were but youths for she a woman naturally of a fantastical and as I have narrated given to comical devices and pranks to a degree She made for them a ball to which she invited all the bonniest lassies far and near in the parish and was out of the body with mirth and had a fiddler from Irville and it was thought by those that were there that had she not been crippled with the rheumatics she would have danced herself But I was concerned to hear both Charles and his friend like hungry hawks rejoicing at the prospect of the war hoping thereby as soon as their midship term was out to be made lieutenants saving this there was no allay in the happiness they brought with them to the parish and it was a delight to see how auld and young of all degrees made of Charles for we were proud of him and none more than myself though he began to take liberties with me calling me old governor it was however in a warmhearted manner only I did not like it when any of the elders heard As for his mother she deported herself like a saint on the occasion There was a temperance in the pleasure of her heart and in her thankfulness that is past the compass of words to describe Even Lady Macadam who never could think a serious thought all her days said in her wild way that the gods had bestowed more care in the making of Mrs Malcolms temper than on the bodies and souls of all the saints in the calendar On the Sunday the strangers attended divine worship and I preached a sermon purposely for them and enlarged at great length and fulness on how David overcame Goliath and they both told me that they had never heard such a good discourse but I do not think they were great judges of preachings How indeed could Mr Howard know anything of sound doctrine being educated as he told me at Eton school a prelatic establishment Nevertheless he was a fine lad and though a little given to frolic and diversion he had a principle of integrity that afterwards kythed into much virtue for during this visit he took a notion of Effie Malcolm and the lassie of him then a sprightly and blooming creature fair to look upon and blithe to see and he kept up a correspondence with her till the war was over when being a captain of a frigate he came down among us and they were married by me as shall be related in its proper place
CHAPTER XVIII YEAR 1777
This may well be called the year of the heavy heart for we had sad tidings of the lads that went away as soldiers to America First there was a boding in the minds of all their friends that they were never to see them more and their sadness like a mist spreading from the waters and covering the fields darkened the spirit of the neighbours Secondly a sound was bruited about that the kings forces would have a hot and a sore struggle before the rebels were put down if they were ever put down Then came the cruel truth of all that the poor lads friends had feared But it is fit and proper that I should relate at length under their several heads the sorrows and afflictions as they came to pass
One evening as I was taking my walk alone meditating my discourse for the next Sabbath—it was shortly after Candlemas—it was a fine clear frosty evening just as the sun was setting Taking my walk alone and thinking of the dreadfulness of Almighty power and how that if it was not tempered and restrained by infinite goodness and wisdom and mercy the miserable sinner man and all things that live would be in a woeful state I drew near the beild where old Widow Mirkland lived by herself who was grandmother to Jock Hempy the ramplor lad that was the second who took on for a soldier I did mind of this at the time but passing the house I heard the croon as it were of a laden soul busy with the Lord and not to disturb the holy workings of grace I paused and listened It was old Mizy Mirkland herself sitting at the gable of the house looking at the sun setting in all his glory behind the Arran hills but she was not praying—only moaning to herself—an oozing out as it might be called of the spirit from her heart then grievously oppressed with sorrow and heavy bodements of grey hairs and poverty—Yonder it slips awa she was saying and my poor bairn thats oer the seas in America is maybe looking on its bright face thinking of his hame and aiblins of me that did my best to breed him up in the fear of the Lord but I couldna warsle wi what was ordained Ay Jock as ye look at the sun gaun down as many a time when ye were a wee innocent laddie at my knee here I hae bade ye look at him as a type of your Maker ye will hae a sore heart for ye hae left me in my need when ye should hae been near at hand to help me for the hard labour and industry with which I brought you up But its the Lords will Blessed be the name of the Lord that makes us to thole the tribulations of this world and will reward us through the mediation of Jesus hereafter She wept bitterly as she said this for her heart was tried but the blessing of a religious contentment was shed upon her and I stepped up to her and asked about her concerns for saving as a parishioner and a decent old woman I knew little of her Brief was her story but it was one of misfortune—But I will not complain she said of the measure that has been meted unto me I was left myself an orphan when I grew up and was married to my gudeman I had known but scant and want Our days of felicity were few and he was taen awa from me shortly after my Mary was born A wailing baby and a widows heart was a he left me I nursed her with my salt tears and bred her in straits but the favour of God was with us and she grew up to womanhood as lovely as the rose and as blameless as the lily In her time she was married to a farming lad There never was a brawer pair in the kirk than on that day when they gaed there first as man and wife My heart was proud and it pleased the Lord to chastise my pride—to nip my happiness even in the bud The very next day he got his arm crushed It never got well again and he fell into a decay and died in the winter leaving my Mary far on in the road to be a mother
When her time drew near we both happened to be working in the yard She was delving to plant potatoes and I told her it would do her hurt but she was eager to provide something as she said for what might happen Oh it was an illomened word The same night her trouble came on and before the morning she was a cauld corpse and another wee wee fatherless baby was greeting at my bosom—it was him thats noo awa in America He grew up to be a fine bairn with a warm heart but a light head and wanting the rein of a fathers power upon him was no sa douce as I could have wished but he was no mans foe save his own I thought and hoped as he grew to years of discretion he would have sobered and been a consolation to my old age but hes gone and hell never come back— disappointment is my portion in this world and I have no hope while I can do I will seek no help but threescore and fifteen can do little and a small ail is a great evil to an aged woman who has but the distaff for her breadwinner
I did all that I could to bid her be of good cheer but the comfort of a hopeful spirit was dead within her and she told me that by many tokens she was assured her bairn was already slain—Thrice said she I have seen his wraith—the first time he was in the pride of his young manhood the next he was pale and wan with a bloody and gashy wound in his side and the third time there was a smoke and when it cleared away I saw him in a grave with neither windingsheet nor coffin
The tale of this pious and resigned spirit dwelt in mine ear and when I went home Mrs Balwhidder thought that I had met with an oercome and was very uneasy so she got the tea soon ready to make me better but scarcely had we tasted the first cup when a loud lamentation was heard in the kitchen This was from that tawpy the wife of Thomas Wilson with her three weans They had been seeking their meat among the farmer houses and in coming home forgathered on the road with the Glasgow carrier who told them that news had come in the London Gazette of a battle in which the regiment that Thomas had listed in was engaged and had suffered loss both in rank and file none doubting that their head was in the number of the slain the whole family grat aloud and came to the manse bewailing him as no more and it afterwards turned out to be the case making it plain to me that there is a farseeing discernment in the spirit that reaches beyond the scope of our incarnate senses
But the weight of the war did not end with these afflictions for instead of the sorrow that the listing caused and the anxiety after and the grief of the bloody tidings operating as wholesome admonition to our young men the natural perversity of the human heart was more and more manifested A wonderful interest was raised among us all to hear of what was going on in the world insomuch that I myself was no longer contented with the relation of the news of the month in the Scots Magazine but joined with my fatherin law Mr Kibbock to get a newspaper twice aweek from Edinburgh As for Lady Macadam who being naturally an impatient woman she had one sent to her three times aweek from London so that we had something fresh five times every week and the old papers were lent out to the families who had friends in the wars This was done on my suggestion hoping it would make all content with their peaceable lot but dominion for a time had been given to the power of contrariness and it had quite an opposite effect It begot a curiosity egging on to enterprise and greatly to my sorrow three of the brawest lads in the parish or in any parish all in one day took on with a party of the Scots Greys that were then lying in Ayr and nothing would satisfy the callans at Mr Lorimores school but instead of their innocent plays with girs and shinties and sicklike they must go ranking like soldiers and fight shamfights in bodies In short things grew to a perfect hostility for a swarm of weans came out from the schools of Irville on a Saturday afternoon and forgathering with ours they had a battle with stones on the tollroad such as was dreadful to hear of for many a one got a mark that day he will take to the grave with him
It was not however by accidents of the field only that we were afflicted those of the flood too were sent likewise against us In the month of October when the corn was yet in the holms and on the cold land by the river side the water of Irville swelled to a great spait from bank to brae sweeping all before it and roaring in its might like an agent of divine displeasure sent forth to punish the inhabitants of the earth The loss of the victual was a thing reparable and those that suffered did not greatly complain for in other respects their harvest had been plenteous but the river in its fury not content with overflowing the lands burst through the sandy hills with a raging force and a riving asunder of the solid ground as when the fountains of the great deep were broken up All in the parish was afoot and on the hills some weeping and wringing their hands not knowing what would happen when they beheld the landmarks of the waters deserted and the river breaking away through the country like the warhorse set loose in his pasture and glorying in his might By this change in the way and channel of the river all the mills in our parish were left more than half a mile from dam or lade and the farmers through the whole winter till the new mills were built had to travel through a heavy road with their victual which was a great grievance and added not a little to the afflictions of this unhappy year which to me were not without a particularity by the death of a full cousin of Mrs Balwhidder my first wife she was grievously burnt by looting over a candle Her mutch which was of the high structure then in vogue took fire and being fastened with corkingpins to a great toupee it could not be got off until she had sustained a deadly injury of which after lingering long she was kindly eased by her removal from trouble This sore accident was to me a matter of deep concern and cogitation but as it happened in Tarbolton and no in our parish I have only alluded to it to show that when my people were chastised by the hand of Providence their pastor was not spared but had a drop from the same vial
CHAPTER XIX YEAR 1778
This year was as the shadow of the bygane there was less actual suffering but what we came through cast a gloom among us and we did not get up our spirits till the spring was far advanced the corn was in the ear and the sun far towards midsummer height before there was any regular show of gladness in the parish
It was clear to me that the wars were not to be soon over for I noticed in the course of this year that there was a greater christening of lad bairns than had ever been in any year during my incumbency and grave and wise persons observant of the signs of the times said that it had been long held as a sure prognostication of war when the births of male children outnumbered that of females
Our chief misfortune in this year was a revival of that wicked mother of many mischiefs the smuggling trade which concerned me greatly but it was not allowed to it to make any thing like a permanent stay among us though in some of the neighbouring parishes its ravages both in morals and property were very distressing and many a mailing was sold to pay for the triumphs of the cutters and gaugers for the government was by this time grown more eager and the war caused the kings ships to be out and about which increased the trouble of the smugglers whose wits in their turn were thereby much sharpened
After Mrs Malcolm by the settlement of Captain Macadam had given up her dealing two maiden women that were sisters Betty and Janet Pawkie came in among us from Ayr where they had friends in league with some of the laigh land folk that carried on the contraband with the Isle of Man which was the very eye of the smuggling They took up the teaselling which Mrs Malcolm had dropped and did business on a larger scale having a general huxtry with parliamentcakes and candles and pincushions as well as other groceries in their window Whether they had any contraband dealings or were only backbitten I cannot take it upon me to say but it was jealoused in the parish that the meal in the sacks that came to their door at night and was sent to the Glasgow market in the morning was not made of corn They were however decent women both sedate and orderly the eldest Betty Pawkie was of a manly stature and had a long beard which made her have a coarse look but she was nevertheless a worthy welldoing creature and at her death she left ten pounds to the poor of the parish as may be seen in the mortification board that the session put up in the kirk as a testification and an example
Shortly after the revival of the smuggling an exciseman was put among us and the first was Robin Bicker a very civil lad that had been a flunkey with Sir Hugh Montgomerie when he was a residenter in Edinburgh before the old Sir Hughs death He was a queer fellow and had a coothy way of getting in about folk the which was very serviceable to him in his vocation nor was he overly gleg but when a job was ill done and he was obliged to notice it he would often break out on the smugglers for being so stupid so that for an exciseman he was wonderful well liked and did not object to a waught of brandy at a time when the auld wives cad it well water It happened however that some unneighbourly person sent him notice of a clecking of tea chests or brandy kegs at which both Jenny and Betty Pawkie were the howdies Robin could not but therefore enter their house however before going in he just cried at the door to somebody on the road so as to let the twa industrious lassies hear he was at hand They were not slack in closing the trancedoor and putting stoups and stools behind it so as to cause trouble and give time before any body could get in They then emptied their chaffbed and filled the tikeing with tea and Betty went in on the top covering herself with the blanket and graining like a woman in labour It was thought that Robin Bicker himself would not have been overly particular in searching the house considering there was a woman seemingly in the deaththraws but a sorner an incomer from the east country and that hung about the changehouse as a divor hostler that would rather gang a days journey in the dark than turn a spade in daylight came to him as he stood at the door and went in with him to see the sport Robin for some reason could not bid him go away and both Betty and Janet were sure he was in the plot against them indeed it was always thought he was an informer and no doubt he was something not canny for he had a down look
It was some time before the doorway was cleared of the stoups and stools and Jenny was in great concern and flustered as she said for her poor sister who was taken with a heartcolic Im sorry for her said Robin but Ill be as quiet as possible and so he searched all the house but found nothing at the which his companion the divor east country hostler swore an oath that could not be misunderstood so without more ado but as all thought against the grain Robin went up to sympathize with Betty in the bed whose groans were loud and vehement Let me feel your pulse said Robin and he looted down as she put forth her arm from aneath the clothes and laying his hand on the bed cried Hey whats this this is a costly filling Upon which Betty jumpet up quite recovered and Jenny fell to the wailing and railing while the hostler from the east country took the bed of tea on his back to carry it to the changehouse till a cart was gotten to take it into the customhouse at Irville
Betty Pawkie being thus suddenly cured and grudging the loss of property took a knife in her hand and as the divor was crossing the burn at the steppingstones that lead to the back of the change house she ran after him and ripped up the tikeing and sent all the tea floating away on the burn which was thought a brave action of Betty and the story not a little helped to lighten our melancholy meditations
Robin Bicker was soon after this affair removed to another district and we got in his place one Mungo Argyle who was as proud as a provost being come of Highland parentage Black was the hour he came among my people for he was needy and greedy and rode on the top of his commission Of all the manifold ills in the train of smuggling surely the excisemen are the worst and the setting of this rabiator over us was a severe judgment for our sins But he suffered fort and peace be with him in the grave where the wicked cease from troubling
Willie Malcolm the youngest son of his mother had by this time learned all that Mr Lorimore the schoolmaster could teach and as it was evidenced to every body by his mild manners and saintliness of demeanour that he was a chosen vessel his mother longed to fulfil his own wish which was doubtless the natural working of the act of grace that had been shed upon him but she had not the wherewithal to send him to the college of Glasgow where he was desirous to study and her just pride would not allow her to cess his brotherinlaw the Captain Macadam whom I should now mention was raised in the end of this year as we read in the newspapers to be a major I thought her in this somewhat unreasonable for she would not be persuaded to let me write to the captain but when I reflected on the good that Willie Malcolm might in time do as a preacher I said nothing more to her but indited a letter to the Lord Eaglesham setting forth the lads parts telling who he was and all about his mothers scruples and by the retour of the post from London his lordship sent me an order on his steward to pay me twenty pounds towards equipping my protegee as he called Willie with a promise to pay for his education which was such a great thing for his lordship to do offhand on my recommendation that it won much affection throughout the country side and folks began to wonder rehearsing the great things as was said that I had gotten my lord at different times and on divers occasions to do which had a vast of influence among my brethren of the presbytery and they grew into a state of greater cordiality with me looking on me as a man having authority but I was none thereat lifted up for not being gifted with the power of a kirkfilling eloquence I was but little sought for at sacraments and fasts and solemn days which was doubtless well ordained for I had no motive to seek fame in foreign pulpits but was left to walk in the paths of simplicity within my own parish To eschew evil myself and to teach others to do the same I thought the main duties of the pastoral office and with a sincere heart endeavoured what in me lay to perform them with meekness sobriety and a spirit wakeful to the inroads of sin and Satan But oh the sordiness of human nature—The kindness of the Lord Eagleshams own disposition was ascribed to my influence and many a dry answer I was obliged to give to applicants that would have me trouble his lordship as if I had a claim upon him In the ensuing year the notion of my cordiality with him came to a great head and brought about an event that could not have been forethought by me as a thing within the compass of possibility to bring to pass
CHAPTER XX YEAR 1779
I was named in this year for the General Assembly and Mrs Balwhidder by her continual thrift having made our purse able to stand a shake against the wind we resolved to go into Edinburgh in a creditable manner Accordingly in conjunct with Mrs Dalrymple the lady of a major of that name we hired the Irville chaise and we put up in Glasgow at the Black Boy where we stayed all night Next morning by seven oclock we got into a flycoach for the capital of Scotland which we reached after a heavy journey about the same hour in the evening and put up at the public where it stopped till the next day for really both me and Mrs Balwhidder were worn out with the undertaking and found a cup of tea a vast refreshment
Betimes in the morning having taken our breakfast we got a caddy to guide us and our wallise to Widow MVicars at the head of the Covenanters Close She was a relation to my first wife Betty Lanshaw my own full cousin that was and we had advised her by course of post of our coming and intendment to lodge with her as uncos and strangers But Mrs MVicar kept a cloth shop and sold plaidings and flannels besides Yorkshire superfines and was used to the sudden incoming of strangers especially visitants both from the West and the North Highlands and was withal a gawsy furthy woman taking great pleasure in hospitality and every sort of kindliness and discretion She would not allow of such a thing as our being lodgers in her house but was so cagey to see us and to have it in her power to be civil to a minister as she was pleased to say of such repute that nothing less would content her but that we must live upon her and partake of all the best that could be gotten for us within the walls of the gude town
When we found ourselves so comfortable Mrs Balwhidder and me waited on my patrons family that was the young ladies and the laird who had been my pupil but was now an advocate high in the law They likewise were kind also In short every body in Edinburgh were in a manner wearisome kind and we could scarcely find time to see the Castle and the palace of Holyroodhouse and that more sanctified place where the Maccabeus of the Kirk of Scotland John Knox was wont to live
Upon my introduction to his grace the Commissioner I was delighted and surprised to find the Lord Eaglesham at the levee and his lordship was so glad on seeing me that he made me more kenspeckle than I could have wished to have been in his graces presence for owing to the same I was required to preach before his grace upon a jocose recommendation of his lordship the which gave me great concern and daunted me so that in the interim I was almost bereft of all peace and studious composure of mind Fain would I have eschewed the honour that was thus thrust upon me but both my wife and Mrs MVicar were just lifted out of themselves with the thought
When the day came I thought all things in this world were loosened from their hold and that the sure and steadfast earth itself was grown coggly beneath my feet as I mounted the pulpit With what sincerity I prayed for help that day and never stood man more in need of it for through all my prayer the congregation was so watchful and still doubtless to note if my doctrine was orthodox that the beating of my heart might have been heard to the uttermost corners of the kirk
I had chosen as my text from Second Samuel xixth chapter and 35th verse these words—Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women Wherefore then should thy servant be yet a burden to the king And hardly had I with a trembling voice read the words when I perceived an awful stir in the congregation for all applied the words to the state of the church and the appointment of his grace the Commissioner Having paused after giving out the text the same fearful and critical silence again ensued and every eye was so fixed upon me that I was for a time deprived of courage to look about but heaven was pleased to compassionate my infirmity and as I proceeded I began to warm as in my own pulpit I described the gorgeous Babylonian harlot riding forth in her chariots of gold and silver with trampling steeds and a hurricane of followers drunk with the cup of abominations all shouting with revelry and glorying in her triumph treading down in their career those precious pearls the saints and martyrs into the mire beneath their swinish feet Before her you may behold Wantonness playing the tinkling cymbal Insolence beating the drum and Pride blowing the trumpet Every vice is there with his emblems and the seller of pardons with his crucifix and triple crown is distributing his largess of perdition The voices of men shout to set wide the gates to give entrance to the queen of nations and the gates are set wide and they all enter The avenging gates close on them—they are all shut up in hell
There was a sough in the kirk as I said these words for the vision I described seemed to be passing before me as I spoke and I felt as if I had witnessed the everlasting destruction of Antichrist and the worshippers of the Beast But soon recovering myself I said in a soft and gentle manner Look at yon lovely creature in virgin raiment with the Bible in her hand See how mildly she walks along giving alms to the poor as she passes on towards the door of that lowly dwelling—Let us follow her in—She takes her seat in the chair at the bedside of the poor old dying sinner and as he tosses in the height of penitence and despair she reads to him the promise of the Saviour—This night thou shalt be with me in Paradise and he embraces her with transports and falling back on his pillow calmly closes his eyes in peace She is the true religion and when I see what she can do even in the last moments of the guilty well may we exclaim when we think of the symbols and pageantry of the departed superstition Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women No let us cling to the simplicity of the Truth that is now established in our native land
At the conclusion of this clause of my discourse the congregation which had been all so still and so solemn never coughing as was often the case among my people gave a great rustle changing their positions by which I was almost overcome however I took heart and ventured on and pointed out that with our Bible and an orthodox priesthood we stood in no need of the kings authority however bound we were in temporal things to respect it and I showed this at some length crying out in the words of my text Wherefore then should thy servant be yet a burden to the king in the saying of which I happened to turn my eyes towards his grace the Commissioner as he sat on the throne and I thought his countenance was troubled which made me add that he might not think I meant him any offence That the King of the Church was one before whom the great and the wise and the good—all doomed and sentenced convicts—implore his mercy It is true said I that in the days of his tribulation he was wounded for our iniquities and died to save us but at his death his greatness was proclaimed by the quick and the dead There was sorrow and there was wonder and there was rage and there was remorse but there was no shame there none blushed on that day at that sight but yon glorious luminary The congregation rose and looked round as the sun that I pointed at shone in at the window I was disconcerted by their movement and my spirit was spent so that I could say no more
When I came down from the pulpit there was a great pressing in of acquaintance and ministers who lauded me exceedingly but I thought it could be only in derision therefore I slipped home to Mrs MVicars as fast as I could
Mrs MVicar who was a clever hearingall sort of a neighbour said my sermon was greatly thought of and that I had surprised everybody but I was fearful there was something of jocularity at the bottom of this for she was a flaunty woman and liked well to give a goodhumoured gibe or jeer However his grace the Commissioner was very thankful for the discourse and complimented me on what he called my apostolical earnestness but he was a courteous man and I could not trust to him especially as my lord Eaglesham had told me in secrecy before—its true it was in his gallanting way—that in speaking of the kings servant as I had done I had rather gone beyond the bounds of modern moderation Altogether I found neither pleasure nor profit in what was thought so great an honour but longed for the privacy of my own narrow pasture and little flock
It was in this visit to Edinburgh that Mrs Balwhidder bought her silver teapot and other ornamental articles but this was not done as she assured me in a vain spirit of bravery which I could not have abided but because it was well known that tea draws better in a silver pot and drinks pleasanter in a china cup than out of any other kind of cup or teapot
By the time I got home to the manse I had been three whole weeks and five days absent which was more than all my absences together from the time of my placing and my people were glowing with satisfaction when they saw us driving in a Glasgow chaise through the clachan to the manse
The rest of the year was merely a quiet succession of small incidents none of which are worthy of notation though they were all severally no doubt of aught somewhere as they took us both time and place in the coming to pass and nothing comes to pass without helping onwards to some great end each particular little thing that happens in the world being a seed sown by the hand of Providence to yield an increase which increase is destined in its turn to minister to some higher purpose until at last the issue affects the whole earth There is nothing in all the world that doth not advance the cause of goodness no not even the sins of the wicked though through the dim casement of her mortal tabernacle the soul of man cannot discern the method thereof
CHAPTER XXI YEAR 1780
This was among ourselves another year of few events A sound it is true came among us of a design on the part of the government in London to bring back the old harlotry of papistry but we spent our time in the lea of the hedge and the lown of the hill Some there were that a panic seized upon when they heard of Lord George Gordon that zealous Protestant being committed to the Tower but for my part I had no terror upon me for I saw all things around me going forward improving and I said to myself it is not so when Providence permits scathe and sorrow to fall upon a nation Civil troubles and the casting down of thrones is always forewarned by want and poverty striking the people What I have therefore chiefly to record as the memorables of this year are things of small import—the main of which are that some of the neighbouring lairds taking example by Mr Kibbock my fatherinlaw that was began in this fall to plant the tops of their hills with mounts of firtrees and Mungo Argyle the exciseman just herried the poor smugglers to death and made a power of prizemoney which however had not the wonted effect of riches for it brought him no honour and he lived in the parish like a leper or any other kind of excommunicated person
But I should not forget a most droll thing that took place with Jenny Gaffaw and her daughter They had been missed from the parish for some days and folk began to be uneasy about what could have become of the two silly creatures till one night at the dead hour a strange light was seen beaming and burning at the window of the bit hole where they lived It was first observed by Lady Macadam who never went to bed at any Christian hour but sat up reading her new French novels and playbooks with Miss Sabrina the schoolmistress She gave the alarm thinking that such a great and continuous light from a lone house where never candle had been seen before could be nothing less than the flame of a burning And sending Miss Sabrina and the servants to see what was the matter they beheld daft Jenny and her as daft daughter with a score of candle doups Heaven only knows where they got them placed in the window and the twa fools dancing and linking and admiring before the door Whats all this about Jenny said Miss Sabrina—Awa wi you awa wi you—ye wicked pope ye whore of Babylon—is na it for the glory of God and the Protestant religion dye think I will be a pope as long as light can put out darkness—And with that the mother and daughter began again to leap and dance as madly as before
It seems that poor Jenny having heard of the luminations that were lighted up through the country on the ending of the Popish Bill had with Meg travelled by themselves into Glasgow where they had gathered or begged a stock of candles and coming back under the cloud of night had surprised and alarmed the whole clachan by lighting up their window in the manner that I have described Poor Miss Sabrina at Jennys uncivil salutation went back to my lady with her heart full and would fain have had the idiots brought to task before the session for what they had said to her But I would not hear tell of such a thing for which Miss Sabrina owed me a grudge that was not soon given up At the same time I was grieved to see the testimonies of joyfulness for a holy victory brought into such disrepute by the illtimed demonstrations of the two irreclaimable naturals that had not a true conception of the cause for which they were triumphing
CHAPTER XXII YEAR 1781
If the two last years passed oer the heads of me and my people without any manifest dolour which is a great thing to say for so long a period in this world we had our own trials and tribulations in the one of which I have now to make mention Mungo Argyle the exciseman waxing rich grew proud and petulant and would have ruled the country side with a rod of iron Nothing less would serve him than a fine horse to ride on and a world of other conveniences and luxuries as if he had been on an equality with gentlemen And he bought a grand gun which was called a fowlingpiece and he had two pointer dogs the like of which had not been seen in the parish since the planting of the Eagleshamwood on the moorland which was four years before I got the call Every body said the man was fey and truly when I remarked him so gallant and gay on the Sabbath at the kirk and noted his glowing face and gleg een I thought at times there was something no canny about him It was indeed clear to be seen that the man was hurried out of himself but nobody could have thought that the death he was to dree would have been what it was
About the end of summer my Lord Eaglesham came to the castle bringing with him an English madam that was his Miss Some days after he came down from London as he was riding past the manse his lordship stopped to enquire for my health and I went to the door to speak to him I thought that he did not meet me with that blithe countenance he was wont and in going away he said with a blush I fear I dare not ask you to come to the castle I had heard of his concubine and I said In saying so my lord you show a spark of grace for it would not become me to see what I have heard and I am surprised my lord you will not rather take a lady of your own He looked kindly but confused saying he did not know where to get one so seeing his shame and not wishing to put him out of conceit entirely with himself I replied Na na my lord theres nobody will believe that for there never was a silly Jock but there was as silly a Jenny at which he laughed heartily and rode away But I know not what was int I was troubled in mind about him and thought as he was riding away that I would never see him again and sure enough it so happened for the next day being airing in his coach with Miss Spangle the lady he had brought he happened to see Mungo Argyle with his dogs and his gun and my lord being as particular about his game as the other was about boxes of tea and kegs of brandy he jumped out of the carriage and ran to take the gun Words passed and the exciseman shot my lord Never shall I forget that day such riding such running the whole country side afoot but the same night my lord breathed his last and the mad and wild reprobate that did the deed was taken up and sent off to Edinburgh This was a woeful riddance of that oppressor for my lord was a good landlord and a kindhearted man and albeit though a little thoughtless was aye ready to make his power when the way was pointed out minister to good works The whole parish mourned for him and there was not a sorer heart in all its bounds than my own Never was such a sight seen as his burial the whole country side was there and all as solemn as if they had been assembled in the valley of Jehoshaphat in the latter day The hedges where the funeral was to pass were clad with weans like bunches of hips and haws and the kirkyard was as if all its own dead were risen Never do I think was such a multitude gathered together Some thought there could not be less than three thousand grown men besides women and children
Scarcely was this great public calamity past for it could be reckoned no less when one Saturday afternoon as Miss Sabrina the schoolmistress was dining with Lady Macadam her ladyship was stricken with the paralytics and her face so thrown in the course of a few minutes that Miss Sabrina came flying to the manse for the help and advice of Mrs Balwhidder A doctor was gotten with all speed by express but her ladyship was smitten beyond the reach of medicine She lived however some time after but oh she was such an object that it was a grief to see her She could only mutter when she tried to speak and was as helpless as a baby Though she never liked me nor could I say there was many things in her demeanour that pleased me yet she was a freehanded woman to the needful and when she died she was more missed than it was thought she could have been
Shortly after her funeral which was managed by a gentleman sent from her friends in Edinburgh that I wrote to about her condition the Major her son with his lady Kate Malcolm and two pretty bairns came and stayed in her house for a time and they were a great happiness to us all both in the way of drinking tea and sometimes taking a bit of dinner their only mother now the worthy and pious Mrs Malcolm being regularly of the company
Before the end of the year I should mention that the fortune of Mrs Malcolms family got another shove upwards by the promotion of her second son Robert Malcolm who being grown an expert and careful mariner was made captain of a grand ship whereof Provost Maitland of Glasgow that was kind to his mother in her distresses was the owner But that douce lad Willie her youngest son who was at the university of Glasgow under the Lord Eagleshams patronage was like to have suffered a blight However Major Macadam when I spoke to him anent the young mans loss of his patron said with a pleasant generosity he should not be stickit and accordingly he made up as far as money could for the loss of his lordship but there was none that made up for the great power and influence which I have no doubt the Earl would have exerted in his behalf when he was ripened for the church So that although in time William came out a sound and heartsearching preacher he was long obliged like many another unfriended saint to cultivate sand and wash Ethiopians in the shape of an east country gentlemans camstrairy weans than which as he wrote me himself there cannot be on earth a greater trial of temper However in the end he was rewarded and is not only now a placed minister but a doctor of divinity
The death of Lady Macadam was followed by another parochial misfortune for considering the time when it happened we could count it as nothing less Auld Thomas Howkings the betheral fell sick and died in the course of a weeks illness about the end of November and the measles coming at that time upon the parish there was such a smashery of the poor weans as had not been known for an age insomuch that James Banes the lad who was Thomas Howkings helper rose in open rebellion against the session during his superiors illness and we were constrained to augment his pay and to promise him the place if Thomas did not recover which it was then thought he could not do On the day this happened there were three dead children in the clachan and a panic and consternation spread about the burial of them when James Banes insurrection was known which made both me and the session glad to hush up the affair that the heart of the public might have no more than the sufferings of individuals to hurt it—Thus ended a year on many accounts heavy to be remembered
CHAPTER XXIII YEAR 1782
Although I have not been particular in noticing it from time to time there had been an occasional going off at fairs and on marketdays of the lads of the parish as soldiers and when Captain Malcolm got the command of his ship no less than four young men sailed with him from the clachan so that we were deeper and deeper interested in the proceedings of the doleful war that was raging in the plantations By one post we heard of no less than three brave fellows belonging to us being slain in one battle for which there was a loud and general lamentation
Shortly after this I got a letter from Charles Malcolm a very pretty letter it indeed was he had heard of my Lord Eagleshams murder and grieved for the loss both because his lordship was a good man and because he had been such a friend to him and his family But said Charles the best way I can show my gratitude for his patronage is to prove myself a good officer to my king and country Which I thought a brave sentiment and was pleased thereat for somehow Charles from the time he brought me the limes to make a bowl of punch in his pocket from Jamaica had built a nest of affection in my heart But oh the wicked wastry of life in war In less than a month after the news came of a victory over the French fleet and by the same post I got a letter from Mr Howard that was the midshipman who came to see us with Charles telling me that poor Charles had been mortally wounded in the action and had afterwards died of his wounds He was a hero in the engagement said Mr Howard and he died as a good and a brave man should—These tidings gave me one of the sorest hearts I ever suffered and it was long before I could gather fortitude to disclose the tidings to poor Charless mother But the callants of the school had heard of the victory and were going shouting about and had set the steeple bell aringing by which Mrs Malcolm heard the news and knowing that Charless ship was with the fleet she came over to the manse in great anxiety to hear the particulars somebody telling her that there had been a foreign letter to me by the postman
When I saw her I could not speak but looked at her in pity and the tear fleeing up into my eyes she guessed what had happened After giving a deep and sore sigh she enquired How did he behave I hope well for he was aye a gallant laddie—and then she wept very bitterly However growing calmer I read to her the letter and when I had done she begged me to give it to her to keep saying Its all that I have now left of my pretty boy but its mair precious to me than the wealth of the Indies and she begged me to return thanks to the Lord for all the comforts and manifold mercies with which her lot had been blessed since the hour she put her trust in him alone and that was when she was left a penniless widow with her five fatherless bairns
It was just an edification of the spirit to see the Christian resignation of this worthy woman Mrs Balwhidder was confounded and said there was more sorrow in seeing the deep grief of her fortitude than tongue could tell
Having taken a glass of wine with her I walked out to conduct her to her own house but in the way we met with a severe trial All the weans were out parading with napkins and kailblades on sticks rejoicing and triumphing in the glad tidings of victory But when they saw me and Mrs Malcolm coming slowly along they guessed what had happened and threw away their banners of joy and standing all up in a row with silence and sadness along the kirkyard wall as we passed showed an instinct of compassion that penetrated to my very soul The poor mother burst into fresh affliction and some of the bairns into an audible weeping and taking one another by the hand they followed us to her door like mourners at a funeral Never was such a sight seen in any town before The neighbours came to look at it as we walked along and the men turned aside to hide their faces while the mothers pressed their babies fondlier to their bosoms and watered their innocent faces with their tears
I prepared a suitable sermon taking as the words of my text Howl ye ships of Tarshish for your strength is laid waste But when I saw around me so many of my people clad in complimentary mourning for the gallant Charles Malcolm and that even poor daft Jenny Gaffaw and her daughter had on an old black riband and when I thought of him the spirited laddie coming home from Jamaica with his parrot on his shoulder and his limes for me my heart filled full and I was obliged to sit down in the pulpit and drop a tear
After a pause and the Lord having vouchsafed to compose me I rose up and gave out that anthem of triumph the 124th psalm the singing of which brought the congregation round to themselves but still I felt that I could not preach as I had meant to do therefore I only said a few words of prayer and singing another psalm dismissed the congregation
CHAPTER XXIV YEAR 1783
This was another Sabbath year of my ministry It has left me nothing to record but a silent increase of prosperity in the parish I myself had now in the bank more than a thousand pounds and every thing was thriving around My two bairns Gilbert that is now the merchant in Glasgow was grown into a sturdy ramplor laddie and Janet that is married upon Dr Kittleword the minister of Swappington was as fine a lassie for her years as the eyes of a parent could desire to see
Shortly after the news of the peace an event at which all gave themselves up to joy a thing happened among us that at the time caused much talk but although very dreadful was yet not so serious some how or other as such an awsome doing should have been Poor Jenny Gaffaw happened to take a heavy cold and soon thereafter died Meg went about from house to house begging dead clothes and got the body straighted in a wonderful decent manner with a plate of earth and salt placed upon it—an admonitory type of mortality and eternal life that has illadvisedly gone out of fashion When I heard of this I could not but go to see how a creature that was not thought possessed of a grain of understanding could have done so much herself On entering the door I beheld Meg sitting with two or three of the neighbouring kimmers and the corpse laid out on a bed Come awa sir said Meg this is an altered house Theyre gane that keepit it bein but sir we maun a come to this—we maun pay the debt o nature—death is a grim creditor and a doctor but brittle bail when the hour of reckonings at han What a pity it is mother that youre now dead for heres the minister come to see you Oh sir but she would have had a proud heart to see you in her dwelling for she had a genteel turn and would not let me her only daughter mess or mell wi the lathron lasses of the clachan Ay ay she brought me up with care and edicated me for a lady nae coarse wark darkened my lilywhite hands But I maun work now I maun dree the penalty of man
Having stopped some time listening to the curious maunnering of
Meg I rose to come away but she laid her hand on my arm saying
No sir ye maun taste before ye gang My mother had aye plenty in
her life nor shall her latter day be needy
Accordingly Meg with all the due formality common on such occasions produced a bottle of water and a dramglass which she filled and tasted then presented to me at the same time offering me a bit of bread on a slate It was a consternation to everybody how the daft creature had learnt all the ceremonies which she performed in a manner past the power of pen to describe making the solemnity of death by her strange mockery a kind of merriment that was more painful than sorrow but some spirits are gifted with a faculty of observation that by the strength of a little fancy enables them to make a wonderful and truthlike semblance of things and events which they never saw and poor Meg seemed to have this gift
The same night the session having provided a coffin the body was put in and removed to Mr Mutchkins brewhouse where the lads and lassies kept the latewake
Saving this the year flowed in a calm and we floated on in the stream of time towards the great ocean of eternity like ducks and geese in the rivers tide that are carried down without being sensible of the speed of the current Alas we have not wings like them to fly back to the place we set out from
CHAPTER XXV YEAR 1784
I have ever thought that this was a bright year truly an Ann Dom for in it many of the lads came home that had listed to be soldiers and Mr Howard that was the midshipman being now a captain of a manofwar came down from England and married Effie Malcolm and took her up with him to London where she wrote to her mother that she found his family people of great note and more kind to her than she could write By this time also Major Macadam was made a colonel and lived with his lady in Edinburgh where they were much respected by the genteeler classes Mrs Macadam being considered a great unco among them for all manner of ladylike ornaments she having been taught every sort of perfection in that way by the old lady who was educated at the court of France and was from her birth a person of quality In this year also Captain Malcolm her brother married a daughter of a Glasgow merchant so that Mrs Malcolm in her declining years had the prospect of a bright setting but nothing could change the sober Christianity of her settled mind and although she was strongly invited both by the Macadams and the Howards to see their felicity she ever declined the same saying—No I have been long out of the world or rather I have never been in it my ways are not as theirs and although I ken their hearts would be glad to be kind to me I might fash their servants or their friends might think me unlike other folk by which instead of causing pleasure mortification might ensue so I will remain in my own house trusting that when they can spare the time they will come and see me
There was a spirit of true wisdom in this resolution for it required a forbearance that in weaker minds would have relaxed but though a person of a most slender and delicate frame of body she was a Judith in fortitude and in all the fortune that seemed now smiling upon her she never was lifted up but bore always that pale and meek look which gave a saintliness to her endeavours in the days of her suffering and poverty
But when we enjoy most we have least to tell I look back on this year as on a sunny spot in the valley amidst the shadows of the clouds of time and I have nothing to record save the remembrance of welcomings and weddings and a meeting of bairns and parents that the wars and the waters had long raged between Contentment within the bosom lent a livelier grace to the countenance of Nature and everybody said that in this year the hedges were greener than common the gowans brighter on the brae and the heads of the statelier trees adorned with a richer coronal of leaves and blossoms All things were animated with the gladness of thankfulness and testified to the goodness of their Maker
CHAPTER XXVI YEAR 1785
Well may we say in the pious words of my old friend and neighbour the Reverend Mr Keekie of Loupinton that the world is such a wheel carriage that it might very properly be called the WHIRLD This reflection was brought home to me in a very striking manner while I was preparing a discourse for my people to be preached on the anniversary day of my placing in which I took a view of what had passed in the parish during the fiveandtwenty years that I had been by the grace of God the pastor thereof The bairns that were bairns when I came among my people were ripened unto parents and a new generation was swelling in the bud around me But it is what happened that I have to give an account of
This year the Lady Macadams jointurehouse that was having been long without a tenant a Mr Cayenne and his family American loyalists came and took it and settled among us for a time His wife was a clever woman and they had two daughters Miss Virginia and Miss Carolina but he was himself an ettercap a perfect spunkie of passion as ever was known in town or country His wife had a terrible time ot with him and yet the unhappy man had a great share of common sense and saving the exploits of his unmanageable temper was an honest and creditable gentleman Of his humour we soon had a sample as I shall relate at length all about it
Shortly after he came to the parish Mrs Balwhidder and me waited upon the family to pay our respects and Mr Cayenne in a free and hearty manner insisted on us staying to dinner His wife I could see was not satisfied with this not being as I discerned afterwards prepared to give an entertainment to strangers however we fell into the misfortune of staying and nothing could exceed the happiness of Mr Cayenne I thought him one of the blithest bodies I had ever seen and had no notion that he was such a tap of tow as in the sequel he proved himself
As there was something extra to prepare the dinner was a little longer of being on the table than usual at which he began to fash and every now and then took a turn up and down the room with his hands behind his back giving a short melancholious whistle At length the dinner was served but it was more scanty than he had expected and this upset his goodhumour altogether Scarcely had I asked the blessing when he began to storm at his blackamoor servant who was however used to his way and did his work without minding him but by some neglect there was no mustard down which Mr Cayenne called for in the voice of a tempest and one of the servant lassies came in with the pot trembling It happened that as it had not been used for a day or two before the lid was clagged and as it were glued in so that Mr Cayenne could not get it out which put him quite wud and he attempted to fling it at Sambo the black lads head but it stottit against the wall and the lid flying open the whole mustard flew in his own face which made him a sight not to be spoken of However it calmed him but really as I had never seen such a man before I could not but consider the accident as a providential reproof and trembled to think what greater evil might fall out in the hands of a man so left to himself in the intemperance of passion
But the worst thing about Mr Cayenne was his meddling with matters in which he had no concern for he had a most irksome nature and could not be at rest so that he was truly a thorn in our side Among other of his strange doings was the part he took in the proceedings of the session with which he had as little to do in a manner as the man in the moon but having no business on his hands he attended every sederunt and from less to more having no self government he began to give his opinion in our deliberations and often bred us trouble by causing strife to arise
It happened as the time of the summer occasion was drawing near that it behoved us to make arrangements about the assistance and upon the suggestion of the elders to which I paid always the greatest deference I invited Mr Keekie of Loupinton who was a sound preacher and a great expounder of the kittle parts of the Old Testament being a man well versed in the Hebrew and etymologies for which he was much reverenced by the old people that delighted to search the Scriptures I had also written to Mr Sprose of Annock a preacher of another sort being a vehement and powerful thresher of the word making the chaff and vain babbling of corrupt commentators to fly from his hand He was not however so well liked as he wanted that connect method which is needful to the enforcing of doctrine But he had never been among us and it was thought it would be a godly treat to the parish to let the people hear him Besides Mr Sprose Mr Waikle of Gowanry a quiet hewer out of the image of holiness in the heart was likewise invited all in addition to our old stoops from the adjacent parishes
None of these three preachers were in any estimation with Mr Cayenne who had only heard each of them once and he happening to be present in the sessionhouse at the time enquired how we had settled I thought this not a very orderly question but I gave him a civil answer saying that Mr Keekie of Loupinton would preach on the morning of the fastday Mr Sprose of Annock in the afternoon and Mr Waikle of Gowanry on the Saturday Never shall I or the elders while the breath of life is in our bodies forget the reply Mr Cayenne struck the table like a clap of thunder and cried Mr Keekie of Loupinton and Mr Sprose of Annock and Mr Waikle of Gowanry and all suck trash may go to—and be and out of the house he bounced like a handball stotting on a stone
The elders and me were confounded and for some time we could not speak but looked at each other doubtful if our ears heard aright At long and length I came to myself and in the strength of God took my place at the table and said this was an outrageous impiety not to be borne which all the elders agreed to and we thereupon came to a resolve which I dictated myself wherein we debarred Mr Cayenne from ever after entering unless summoned the session house the which resolve we directed the sessionclerk to send to him direct and thus we vindicated the insulted privileges of the church
Mr Cayenne had cooled before he got home and our paper coming to him in his appeased blood he immediately came to the manse and made a contrite apology for his hasty temper which I reported in due time and form to the session and there the matter ended But here was an example plain to be seen of the truth of the old proverb that as one door shuts another opens for scarcely were we in quietness by the decease of that old lightheaded woman the Lady Macadam till a full equivalent for her was given in this hot and fiery Mr Cayenne
CHAPTER XXVII YEAR 1786
From the day of my settlement I had resolved in order to win the affections of my people and to promote unison among the heritors to be of as little expense to the parish as possible but by this time the manse had fallen into a sore state of decay—the doors were wormed on the hinges—the casements of the windows chattered all the winter like the teeth of a person perishing with cold so that we had no comfort in the house by which at the urgent instigations of Mrs Balwhidder I was obligated to represent our situation to the session I would rather having so much saved money in the bank paid the needful repairs myself than have done this but she said it would be a rank injustice to our own family and her father Mr Kibbock who was very longheaded with more than a common mans portion of understanding pointed out to me that as my life was but in my lip it would be a wrong thing towards whomsoever was ordained to be my successor to use the heritors to the custom of the minister paying for the reparations of the manse as it might happen he might not be so well able to afford it as me So in a manner by their persuasion and the constraint of the justice of the case I made a report of the infirmities both of doors and windows as well as of the rotten state of the floors which were constantly in want of cobbling Over and above all I told them of the sarking of the roof which was as frush as a puddockstool insomuch that in every blast some of the pins lost their grip and the slates came hurling off
The heritors were accordingly convened and after some deliberation they proposed that the house should be seen to and whitewashed and painted and I thought this might do for I saw they were terrified at the expense of a thorough repair but when I went home and repeated to Mrs Balwhidder what had been said at the meeting and my thankfulness at getting the heritors consent to do so much she was excessively angry and told me that all the painting and whitewashing in the world would avail nothing for that the house was as a sepulchre full of rottenness and she sent for Mr Kibbock her father to confer with him on the way of getting the matter put to rights
Mr Kibbock came and hearing of what had passed pondered for some time and then said All was very right the minister meaning me has just to get tradesmen to look at the house and write out their opinion of what it needs There will be plaster to mend so before painting he will get a plasterer There will be a slater wanted he has just to get a slaters estimate and a wrights and so forth and when all is done he will lay them before the session and the heritors who no doubt will direct the reparations to go forward
This was very pawkie counselling of Mr Kibbock and I did not see through it at the time but did as he recommended and took all the different estimates when they came in to the session The elders commended my prudence exceedingly for so doing before going to work and one of them asked me what the amount of the whole would be but I had not cast it up Some of the heritors thought that a hundred pounds would be sufficient for the outlay but judge of our consternation when in counting up all the sums of the different estimates together we found them well on towards a thousand pounds Better big a new house at once than do this cried all the elders by which I then perceived the draughtiness of Mr Kibbocks advice Accordingly another meeting of the heritors was summoned and after a great deal of controversy it was agreed that a new manse should be erected and shortly after we contracted with Thomas Trowel the mason to build one for six hundred pounds with all the requisite appurtenances by which a clear gain was saved to the parish by the foresight of Mr Kibbock to the amount of nearly four hundred pounds But the heritors did not mean to have allowed the sort of repair that his plan comprehended He was however a far forecasting man the like of him for natural parts not being in our country side and nobody could get the whiphand of him either in a bargain or an improvement when he once was sensible of the advantage He was indeed a blessing to the shire both by his example as a farmer and by his sound and discreet advice in the contentions of his neighbours being a man as was a saying among the commonality wiser than the law and the fifteen Lords of Edinburgh
The building of the new manse occasioned a heavy cess on the heritors which made them overly ready to pick holes in the coats of me and the elders so that out of my forbearance and delicacy in time past grew a lordliness on their part that was an ill return for the years that I had endured no little inconveniency for their sake It was not in my heart or principles to harm the hair of a dog but when I discerned the austerity with which they were disposed to treat their minister I bethought me that for the preservation of what was due to the establishment and the upholding of the decent administration of religion I ought to set my face against the sordid intolerance by which they were actuated This notion I weighed well before divulging it to any person but when I had assured myself as to the rectitude thereof I rode over one day to Mr Kibbocks and broke my mind to him about claiming out of the teinds an augmentation of my stipend not because I needed it but in case after me some bare and hungry gorbie of the Lord should be sent upon the parish in no such condition to plea with the heritors as I was Mr Kibbock highly approved of my intent and by his help after much tribulation I got an augmentation both in glebe and income and to mark my reason for what I did I took upon me to keep and clothe the wives and orphans of the parish who lost their breadwinners in the American war But for all that the heritors spoke of me as an avaricious Jew and made the hardwon fruits of Mrs Balwhidders great thrift and good management a matter of reproach against me Few of them would come to the church but stayed away to the detriment of their own souls hereafter in order as they thought to punish me so that in the course of this year there was a visible decay of the sense of religion among the better orders of the parish and as will be seen in the sequel their evil example infected the minds of many of the rising generation
It was in this year that Mr Cayenne bought the mailing of the Wheatrigs but did not begin to build his house till the following spring for being ill to please with a plan he fell out with the builders and on one occasion got into such a passion with Mr Trowel the mason that he struck him a blow on the face for which he was obligated to make atonement It was thought the matter would have been carried before the Lords but by the mediation of Mr Kibbock with my helping hand a reconciliation was brought about Mr Cayenne indemnifying the mason with a sum of money to say no more anent it after which he employed him to build his house a thing that no man could have thought possible who reflected on the enmity between them
CHAPTER XXVIII YEAR 1787
There had been as I have frequently observed a visible improvement going on in the parish From the time of the making of the toll road every new house that was built in the clachan was built along that road Among other changes hereby caused the Lady Macadams jointurehouse that was which stood in a pleasant parterre inclosed within a stone wall and an iron gate having a pillar with a pineapple head on each side came to be in the middle of the town While Mr Cayenne inhabited the same it was maintained in good order but on his flitting to his own new house on the Wheatrigs the parterre was soon overrun with weeds and it began to wear the look of a waste place Robert Toddy who then kept the change house and who had from the ladys death rented the coachhouse for stabling in this juncture thought of it for an inn so he set his own house to Thomas Treddles the weaver whose son William is now the great Glasgow manufacturer that has cottonmills and steam engines and took the Place as it was called and had a fine sign THE CROSSKEYS painted and put up in golden characters by which it became one of the most noted inns anywhere to be seen and the civility of Mrs Toddy was commended by all strangers But although this transmutation from a changehouse to an inn was a vast amendment in a manner to the parish there was little amendment of manners thereby for the farmer lads began to hold dancings and other riotous proceedings there and to bring as it were the evil practices of towns into the heart of the country All sort of licence was allowed as to drink and hours and the edifying example of Mr Mutchkins and his pious family was no longer held up to the imitation of the wayfaring man
Saving the mutation of the Place into an inn nothing very remarkable happened in this year We got into our new manse about the middle of March but it was rather damp being new plastered and it caused me to have a severe attack of the rheumatics in the fall of the year
I should not in my notations forget to mark a new luxury that got in among the commonality at this time By the opening of new roads and the traffic thereon with carts and carriers and by our young men that were sailors going to the Clyde and sailing to Jamaica and the West Indies heaps of sugar and coffeebeans were brought home while many among the kailstocks and cabbages in their yards had planted groset and berry bushes which two things happening together the fashion to make jam and jelly which hitherto had been only known in the kitchens and confectionaries of the gentry came to be introduced into the clachan All this however was not without a plausible pretext for it was found that jelly was an excellent medicine for a sore throat and jam a remedy as good as London candy for a cough or a cold or a shortness of breath I could not however say that this gave me so much concern as the smuggling trade only it occasioned a great fasherie to Mrs Balwhidder for in the berry time there was no end to the borrowing of her brasspan to make jelly and jam till Mrs Toddy of the CrossKeys bought one which in its turn came into request and saved ours
It was in the Martinmas quarter of this year that I got the first payment of my augmentation Having no desire to rip up old sores I shall say no more anent it the worst being anticipated in my chronicle of the last year but there was a thing happened in the payment that occasioned a vexation at the time of a very disagreeable nature Daft Meg Gaffaw who from the tragical death of her mother was a privileged subject used to come to the manse on the Saturdays for a meal of meat and so it fell out that as by some neglect of mine no steps had been taken to regulate the disposal of the victual that constituted the means of the augmentation some of the heritors in an ungracious temper sent what they called the titheball the Lord knows it was not the fiftieth to the manse where I had no place to put it This fell out on a Saturday night when I was busy with my sermon thinking not of silver or gold but of much better so that I was greatly molested and disturbed thereby Daft Meg who sat by the kitchen chimleylug hearing a said nothing for a time but when she saw how Mrs Balwhidder and me were put to she cried out with a loud voice like a soul under the inspiration of prophecy—When the widows cruse had filled all the vessels in the house the Lord stopped the increase Verily verily I say unto you if your barns be filled and your girnellkists can hold no more seek till ye shall find the tume basins of the poor and therein pour the corn and the oil and the wine of your abundance so shall ye be blessed of the Lord The which words I took for an admonition and directing the sacks to be brought into the diningroom and other chambers of the manse I sent off the heritors servants that had done me this prejudice with an unexpected thankfulness But this as I afterwards was informed both them and their masters attributed to the greedy grasp of avarice with which they considered me as misled and having said so nothing could exceed their mortification on Monday when they heard for they were of those who had deserted the kirk that I had given by the precentor notice to every widow in the parish that was in need to come to the manse and she would receive her portion of the partitioning of the augmentation Thus without any offence on my part saving the strictness of justice was a division made between me and the heritors but the people were with me and my own conscience was with me and though the fronts of the lofts and the pews of the heritors were but thinly filled I trusted that a good time was coming when the gentry would see the error of their way So I bent the head of resignation to the Lord and assisted by the wisdom of Mr Kibbock adhered to the course I had adopted but at the close of the year my heart was sorrowful for the schism and my prayer on Hogmanay was one of great bitterness of soul that such an evil had come to pass
CHAPTER XXIX YEAR 1788
It had been often remarked by ingenious men that the Brawl burn which ran through the parish though a small was yet a rapid stream and had a wonderful capability for damming and to turn mills From the time that the Irville water deserted its channel this brook grew into repute and several mills and dams had been erected on its course In this year a proposal came from Glasgow to build a cottonmill on its banks beneath the Witchlinn which being on a corner of the Wheatrig the property of Mr Cayenne he not only consented thereto but took a part in the profit or loss therein and being a man of great activity though we thought him for many a day a serpentplague sent upon the parish he proved thereby one of our greatest benefactors The cottonmill was built and a spacious fabric it was—nothing like it had been seen before in our day and generation—and for the people that were brought to work in it a new town was built in the vicinity which Mr Cayenne the same being founded on his land called Cayenneville the name of the plantation in Virginia that had been taken from him by the rebellious Americans From that day Fortune was lavish of her favours upon him his property swelled and grew in the most extraordinary manner and the whole country side was stirring with a new life For when the mill was set agoing he got weavers of muslin established in Cayenneville and shortly after but that did not take place till the year following he brought women all the way from the neighbourhood of Manchester in England to teach the lassie bairns in our old clachan tambouring
Some of the ancient families in their turreted houses were not pleased with this innovation especially when they saw the handsome dwellings that were built for the weavers of the mills and the unstinted hand that supplied the wealth required for the carrying on of the business It sank their pride into insignificance and many of them would almost rather have wanted the rise that took place in the value of their lands than have seen this incoming of what they called oersea speculation But saving the building of the cottonmill and the beginning of Cayenneville nothing more memorable happened in this year still it was nevertheless a year of a great activity The minds of men were excited to new enterprises a new genius as it were had descended upon the earth and there was an erect and outlooking spirit abroad that was not to be satisfied with the taciturn regularity of ancient affairs Even Miss Sabrina Hooky the schoolmistress though now waned from her meridian was touched with the enlivening rod and set herself to learn and to teach tambouring in such a manner as to supersede by precept and example that old timehonoured functionary as she herself called it the spinningwheel proving as she did one night to Mr Kibbock and me that if more money could be made by a woman tambouring than by spinning it was better for her to tambour than to spin
But in the midst of all this commercing and manufacturing I began to discover signs of decay in the wonted simplicity of our country ways Among the cottonspinners and muslin weavers of Cayenneville were several unsatisfied and ambitious spirits who clubbed together and got a London newspaper to the CrossKeys where they were nightly in the habit of meeting and debating about the affairs of the French which were then gathering towards a head They were represented to me as lads by common in capacity but with unsettled notions of religion They were however quiet and orderly and some of them since at Glasgow Paisley and Manchester even I am told in London have grown into a topping way
It seems they did not like my manner of preaching and on that account absented themselves from public worship which when I heard I sent for some of them to convince them of their error with regard to the truth of divers points of doctrine but they confounded me with their objections and used my arguments which were the old and orthodox proven opinions of the Divinity Hall as if they had been the light sayings of a vain man So that I was troubled fearing that some change would ensue to my people who had hitherto lived amidst the boughs and branches of the gospel unmolested by the fowlers snare and I set myself to watch narrowly and with a vigilant eye what would come to pass
There was a visible increase among us of worldly prosperity in the course of this year insomuch that some of the farmers who were in the custom of taking their vendibles to the neighbouring towns on the Tuesdays the Wednesdays and Fridays were led to open a market on the Saturdays in our own clachan the which proved a great convenience But I cannot take it upon me to say whether this can be said to have well begun in the present Ann Dom although I know that in the summer of the ensuing year it was grown into a settled custom which I well recollect by the Macadams coming with their bairns to see Mrs Malcolm their mother suddenly on a Saturday afternoon on which occasion me and Mrs Balwhidder were invited to dine with them and Mrs Malcolm bought in the market for the dinner that day both mutton and fowls such as twenty years before could not have been got for love or money on such a pinch Besides she had two bottles of red and white wine from the CrossKeys luxuries which saving in the Breadland House in its best days could not have been had in the whole parish but must have been brought from a borough town for Eaglesham Castle is not within the bounds of Dalmailing and my observe does not apply to the stock and stores of that honourable mansion but only to the dwellings of our own heritors who were in general straitened in their circumstances partly with upsetting and partly by the eating rust of family pride which hurt the edge of many a clever fellow among them that would have done well in the way of trade but sunk into divors for the sake of their genteelity
CHAPTER XXX YEAR 1789
This I have always reflected upon as one of our blessed years It was not remarkable for any extraordinary occurrence but there was a hopefulness in the minds of men and a planning of new undertakings of which whatever may be the upshot the devising is ever rich in the cheerful anticipations of good
Another new line of road was planned for a shorter cut to the cottonmill from the main road to Glasgow and a publichouse was opened in Cayenneville the latter however was not an event that gave me much satisfaction but it was a convenience to the inhabitants and the carriers that brought the cottonbags and took away the yarn twice aweek needed a place of refreshment And there was a stagecoach set up thrice every week from Ayr that passed through the town by which it was possible to travel to Glasgow between breakfast and dinner time a thing that could not when I came to the parish have been thought within the compass of man
This stagecoach I thought one of the greatest conveniences that had been established among us and it enabled Mrs Balwhidder to send a basket of her fresh butter into the Glasgow market by which in the spring and the fall of the year she got a great price for the Glasgow merchants are fond of excellent eatables and the payment was aye ready money—Tam Whirlit the driver paying for the one basket when he took up the other
In this year William Malcolm the youngest son of the widow having been some time a tutor in a family in the east country came to see his mother as indeed he had done every year from the time he went to the college but this occasion was made remarkable by his preaching in my pulpit His old acquaintance were curious to hear him and I myself had a sort of a wish likewise being desirous to know how far he was orthodox so I thought fit on the suggestion of one of the elders to ask him to preach one day for me which after some fleeching he consented to do I think however there was a true modesty in his diffidence although his reason was a weak one being lest he might not satisfy his mother who had as yet never heard him Accordingly on the Sabbath after he did preach and the kirk was well packed and I was not one of the least attentive of the congregation His sermon assuredly was well put together and there was nothing to object to in his doctrine but the elderly people thought his language rather too Englified which I thought likewise for I never could abide that the plain auld Kirk of Scotland with her sober presbyterian simplicity should borrow either in word or in deed from the language of the prelatic hierarchy of England Nevertheless the younger part of the congregation were loud in his praise saying there had not been heard before such a style of language in our side of the country As for Mrs Malcolm his mother when I spoke to her anent the same she said but little expressing only her hope that his example would be worthy of his precepts so that upon the whole it was a satisfaction to us all that he was likely to prove a stoop and upholding pillar to the Kirk of Scotland And his mother had the satisfaction before she died to see him a placed minister and his name among the authors of his country for he published at Edinburgh a volume of Moral Essays of which he sent me a pretty bound copy and they were greatly creditable to his pen though lacking somewhat of that birr and smeddum that is the juice and flavour of books of that sort
CHAPTER XXXI YEAR 1790
The features of this Ann Dom partook of the character of its predecessor Several new houses were added to the clachan Cayenneville was spreading out with weavers shops and growing up fast into a town In some respects it got the start of ours for one day when I was going to dine with Mr Cayenne at Wheatrig House not a little to my amazement did I behold a booksellers shop opened there with sticks of red and black wax pouncetboxes pens pocketbooks and new publications in the window such as the like of was only to be seen in cities and borough towns And it was lighted at night by a patent lamp which shed a wonderful beam burning oil and having no smoke The man sold likewise perfumery powderpuffs trinkets and Dublin dolls besides penknives Castile soap and walkingsticks together with a prodigy of other luxuries too tedious to mention
Upon conversing with the man for I was enchanted to go into this phenomenon for as no less could I regard it he told me that he had a correspondence with London and could get me down any book published there within the same month in which it came out and he showed me divers of the newest come out of which I did not read even in the Scots Magazine till more than three months after although I had till then always considered that work as most interesting for its early intelligence But what I was most surprised to hear was that he took in a daily London newspaper for the spinners and weavers who paid him a penny aweek apiece for the same they being all greatly taken up with what at the time was going on in France
This bookseller in the end however proved a whawp in our nest for he was in league with some of the English reformers and when the story took wind three years after concerning the plots and treasons of the corresponding societies and democrats he was fain to make a moonlight flitting leaving his wife for a time to manage his affairs I could not however think any ill of the man notwithstanding for he had very correct notions of right and justice in a political sense and when he came into the parish he was as orderly and wellbehaved as any other body and conduct is a test that I have always found as good for a mans principles as professions Nor at the time of which I am speaking was there any of that dread or fear of reforming the government that has since been occasioned by the wild and wasteful hand which the French employed in their revolution
But among other improvements I should mention that a Doctor Marigold came and settled in Cayenneville a small round happy tempered man whose funny stories were far better liked than his drugs There was a doubt among some of the weavers if he was a skilful Esculapian and this doubt led to their holding out an inducement to another medical man Dr Tanzey to settle there likewise by which it grew into a saying that at Cayenneville there was a doctor for health as well as sickness for Dr Marigold was one of the best hands in the country at a pleasant punchbowl while Dr Tanzey had all the requisite knowledge for the faculty for the bedside
It was in this year that the hourplate and hand on the kirk steeple were renewed as indeed may yet be seen by the date though it be again greatly in want of fresh gilding for it was by my advice that the figures of the Ann Dom were placed one in each corner In this year likewise the bridge over the Brawl burn was built—a great convenience in the winter time to the parishioners that lived on the north side for when there happened to be a spait on the Sunday it kept them from the kirk but I did not find that the bridge mended the matter till after the conclusion of the war against the democrats and the beginning of that which we are now waging with Boney their child and champion It is indeed wonderful to think of the occultation of grace that was taking place about this time throughout the whole bound of Christendom for I could mark a visible darkness of infidelity spreading in the corner of the vineyard committed to my keeping and a falling away of the vines from their wonted props and confidence in the truths of Revelation But I said nothing I knew that the faith could not be lost and that it would be found purer and purer the more it was tried and this I have lived to see many now being zealous members of the church that were abundantly lukewarm at the period of which I am now speaking
CHAPTER XXXII YEAR 1791
In the spring of this year I took my son Gilbert into Glasgow to place him in a countinghouse As he had no inclination for any of the learned professions and not having been there from the time when I was sent to the General Assembly I cannot express my astonishment at the great improvements surpassing far all that was done in our part of the country which I thought was not to be paralleled When I came afterwards to reflect on my simplicity in this it was clear to me that we should not judge of the rest of the world by what we see going on around ourselves but walk abroad into other parts and thereby enlarge our sphere of observation as well as ripen our judgment of things
But although there was no doubt a great and visible increase of the city loftier buildings on all sides and streets that spread their arms far into the embraces of the country I thought the looks of the population were impaired and that there was a greater proportion of long white faces in the Trongate than when I attended the Divinity class These I was told were the weavers and others concerned in the cotton trade which I could well believe for they were very like in their looks to the men of Cayenneville but from living in a crowded town and not breathing a wholesome country air between their tasks they had a stronger cast of unhealthy melancholy I was therefore very glad that Providence had placed in my hand the pastoral staff of a country parish for it cut me to the heart to see so many young men in the rising prime of life already in the arms of a pale consumption If therefore said I to Mrs Balwhidder when I returned home to the manse we live as it were within the narrow circle of ignorance we are spared from the pain of knowing many an evil and surely in much knowledge there is sadness of heart
But the main effect of this was to make me do all in my power to keep my people contented with their lowly estate for in that same spirit of improvement which was so busy every where I could discern something like a shadow that showed it was not altogether of that pure advantage which avarice led all so eagerly to believe Accordingly I began a series of sermons on the evil and vanity of riches and for the most part of the year pointed out in what manner they led the possessor to indulge in sinful luxuries and how indulgence begat desire and desire betrayed integrity and corrupted the heart making it evident that the rich man was liable to forget his unmerited obligations to God and to oppress the laborious and the needful when he required their services
Little did I imagine in thus striving to keep aloof the ravenous wolf Ambition from my guileless flock that I was giving cause for many to think me an enemy to the king and government and a perverter of Christianity to suit levelling doctrines But so it was Many of the heritors considered me a blackneb though I knew it not but went on in the course of my duty thinking only how best to preserve peace on earth and goodwill towards men I saw however an altered manner in the deportment of several with whom I had long lived in friendly terms It was not marked enough to make me inquire the cause but sufficiently plain to affect my ease of mind Accordingly about the end of this year I fell into a dull way my spirit was subdued and at times I was aweary of the day and longed for the night when I might close my eyes in peaceful slumbers I missed my son Gilbert who had been a companion to me in the long nights while his mother was busy with the lasses and their ceaseless wheels and cardings in the kitchen Often could I have found it in my heart to have banned that neverceasing industry and to tell Mrs Balwhidder that the married state was made for something else than to make napery and beetle blankets but it was her happiness to keep all at work and she had no pleasure in any other way of life so I sat many a night by the fireside with resignation sometimes in the study and sometimes in the parlour and as I was doing nothing Mrs Balwhidder said it was needless to light the candle Our daughter Janet was in this time at a boardingschool in Ayr so that I was really a most solitary married man
CHAPTER XXXIII YEAR 1792
When the spring in this year began to brighten on the brae the cloud of dulness that had darkened and oppressed me all the winter somewhat melted away and I could now and then joke again at the neverending toil and trouble of that busiest of all bees the second Mrs Balwhidder But still I was far from being right a small matter affected me and I was overly given to walking by myself and musing on things that I could tell nothing about—my thoughts were just the rack of a dream without form and driving witlessly as the smoke that mounteth up and is lost in the airy heights of the sky
Heeding little of what was going on in the clachan and taking no interest in the concerns of any body I would have been contented to die but I had no ail about me An accident however fell out that by calling on me for an effort had the blessed influence of clearing my vapours almost entirely away
One morning as I was walking on the sunny side of the road where the footpath was in the next year made to the cottonmill I fell in with Mr Cayenne who was seemingly much fashed—a small matter could do that at any time and he came up to me with a red face and an angry eye It was not my intent to speak to him for I was grown loth to enter into conversation with any body so I bowed and passed on What cried Mr Cayenne and will you not speak to me I turned round and said meekly Mr Cayenne I have no objections to speak to you but having nothing particular to say it did not seem necessary just now
He looked at me like a gled and in a minute exclaimed Mad by Jupiter as mad as a March hare He then entered into conversation with me and said that he had noticed me an altered man and was just so far on his way to the manse to enquire what had befallen me So from less to more we entered into the marrow of my case and I told him how I had observed the estranged countenances of some of the heritors at which he swore an oath that they were a parcel of the damndest boobies in the country and told me how they had taken it into their heads that I was a leveller But I know you better said Mr Cayenne and have stood up for you as an honest conscientious man though I dont much like your humdrum preaching However let that pass I insist upon your dining with me today when some of these arrant fools are to be with us and the devils int if I dont make you friends with them I did not think Mr Cayenne however very well qualified for peacemaker but nevertheless I consented to go and having thus got an inkling of the cause of that cold backturning which had distressed me so much I made such an effort to remove the error that was entertained against me that some of the heritors before we separated shook me by the hands with the cordiality of renewed friendship and as if to make amends for past neglect there was no end to their invitations to dinner which had the effect of putting me again on my mettle and removing the thick and muddy melancholious humour out of my blood
But what confirmed my cure was the coming home of my daughter Janet from the Ayr boardingschool where she had learnt to play on the spinnet and was become a conversible lassie with a competent knowledge for a woman of geography and history so that when her mother was busy with the weariful booming wheel she entertained me sometimes with a tune and sometimes with her tongue which made the winter nights fly cantily by
Whether it was owing to the malady of my imagination throughout the greatest part of this year or that really nothing particular did happen to interest me I cannot say but it is very remarkable that I have nothing remarkable to record—further than I was at the expense myself of getting the manse roughcase and the window cheeks painted with roans put up rather than apply to the heritors for they were always sorely fashed when called upon for outlay
CHAPTER XXXIV YEAR 1793
On the first night of this year I dreamt a very remarkable dream which when I now recall to mind at this distance of time I cannot but think that there was a case of prophecy in it I thought that I stood on the tower of an old popish kirk looking out at the window upon the kirkyard where I beheld ancient tombs with effigies and coatsofarms on the wall thereof and a great gate at the one side and a door that led into a dark and dismal vault at the other I thought all the dead that were lying in the common graves rose out of their coffins at the same time from the old and grand monuments with the effigies and coatsofarms came the great men and the kings of the earth with crowns on their heads and globes and sceptres in their hands
I stood wondering what was to ensue when presently I heard the noise of drums and trumpets and anon I beheld an army with banners entering in at the gate upon which the kings and the great men came also forth in their power and array and a dreadful battle was foughten but the multitude that had risen from the common graves stood afar off and were but lookerson
The kings and their host were utterly discomfited They were driven within the doors of their monuments their coatsofarms were broken off and their effigies cast down and the victors triumphed over them with the flourishes of trumpets and the waving of banners But while I looked the vision was changed and I then beheld a wide and a dreary waste and afar off the steeples of a great city and a tower in the midst like the tower of Babel and on it I could discern written in characters of fire Public Opinion While I was pondering at the same I heard a great shout and presently the conquerors made their appearance coming over the desolate moor They were going in great pride and might towards the city but an awful burning rose afar as it were in the darkness and the flames stood like a tower of fire that reached unto the heavens And I saw a dreadful hand and an arm stretched from out of the cloud and in its hold was a besom made of the hail and the storm and it swept the fugitives like dust and in their place I saw the churchyard as it were cleared and spread around the graves closed and the ancient tombs with their coatsofarms and their effigies of stone all as they were in the beginning I then awoke and behold it was a dream
This vision perplexed me for many days and when the news came that the King of France was beheaded by the hands of his people I received as it were a token in confirmation of the vision that had been disclosed to me in my sleep and I preached a discourse on the same and against the French Revolution that was thought one of the greatest and soundest sermons that I had ever delivered in my pulpit
On the Monday following Mr Cayenne who had been some time before appointed a justice of the peace came over from Wheatrig House to the CrossKeys where he sent for me and divers other respectable inhabitants of the clachan and told us that he was to have a sad business for a warrant was out to bring before him two democratical weaver lads on a suspicion of high treason Scarcely were the words uttered when they were brought in and he began to ask them how they dared to think of dividing with their liberty and equality of principles his and every other mans property in the country The men answered him in a calm manner and told him they sought no mans property but only their own natural rights upon which he called them traitors and reformers They denied they were traitors but confessed they were reformers and said they knew not how that should be imputed to them as a fault for that the greatest men of all times had been reformers—Was not they said our Lord Jesus Christ a reformer—And what the devil did he make of it cried Mr Cayenne bursting with passion Was he not crucified
I thought when I heard these words that the pillars of the earth sank beneath me and that the roof of the house was carried away in a whirlwind The drums of my ears crackit blue starns danced before my sight and I was fain to leave the house and hie me home to the manse where I sat down in my study like a stupified creature awaiting what would betide Nothing however was found against the weaver lads but I never from that day could look on Mr Cayenne as a Christian though surely he was a true governmentman
Soon after this affair there was a pleasant reedification of a gospelspirit among the heritors especially when they heard how I had handled the regicides in France and on the following Sunday I had the comfortable satisfaction to see many a gentleman in their pews that had not been for years within a kirkdoor The democrats who took a world of trouble to misrepresent the actions of the gentry insinuated that all this was not from any new sense of grace but in fear of their being reported as suspected persons to the kings government But I could not think so and considered their renewal of communion with the church as a swearing of allegiance to the King of kings against that host of French atheists who had torn the mortcloth from the coffin and made it a banner with which they were gone forth to war against the Lamb The whole year was however spent in great uneasiness and the proclamation of the war was followed by an appalling stop in trade We heard of nothing but failures on all hands and among others that grieved me was that of Mr Maitland of Glasgow who had befriended Mrs Malcolm in the days of her affliction and gave her son Robert his fine ship It was a sore thing to hear of so many breakings especially of old respected merchants like him who had been a Lord Provost and was far declined into the afternoon of life He did not however long survive the mutation of his fortune but bending his aged head in sorrow sank down beneath the stroke to rise no more
CHAPTER XXXV YEAR 1794
This year had opened into all the leafiness of midsummer before anything memorable happened in the parish further than that the sad division of my people into governmentmen and jacobins was perfected This calamity for I never could consider such heartburning among neighbours as any thing less than a very heavy calamity was assuredly occasioned by faults on both sides but it must be confessed that the gentry did nothing to win the commonality from the errors of their way A little more condescension on their part would not have made things worse and might have made them better but pride interposed and caused them to think that any show of affability from them would be construed by the democrats into a terror of their power while the democrats were no less to blame for hearing how their compeers were thriving in France and demolishing every obstacle to their ascendency they were crouse and really insolent evidencing none of that temperance in prosperity that proves the possessors worthy of their good fortune
As for me my duty in these circumstances was plain and simple The Christian religion was attempted to be brought into disrepute the rising generation were taught to gibe at its holiest ordinances and the kirk was more frequented as a place to while away the time on a rainy Sunday than for any insight of the admonitions and revelations in the sacred book Knowing this I perceived that it would be of no effect to handle much the mysteries of the faith but as there was at the time a bruit and a sound about universal benevolence philanthropy utility and all the other disguises with which an infidel philosophy appropriated to itself the charity brotherly love and welldoing inculcated by our holy religion I set myself to task upon these heads and thought it no robbery to use a little of the stratagem employed against Christs kingdom to promote the interests thereof in the hearts and understandings of those whose ears would have been sealed against me had I attempted to expound higher things Accordingly on one day it was my practice to show what the nature of Christian charity was comparing it to the light and warmth of the sun that shines impartially on the just and the unjust—showing that man without the sense of it as a duty was as the beasts that perish and that every feeling of his nature was intimately selfish but then when actuated by this divine impulse he rose out of himself and became as a god zealous to abate the sufferings of all things that live and on the next day I demonstrated that the new benevolence which had come so much into vogue was but another version of this Christian virtue In like manner I dealt with brotherly love bringing it home to the business and bosoms of my hearers that the Christianity of it was neither enlarged nor bettered by being baptized with the Greek name of philanthropy With welldoing however I went more roundly to work I told my people that I thought they had more sense than to secede from Christianity to become Utilitarians for that it would be a confession of ignorance of the faith they deserved seeing that it was the main duty inculcated by our religion to do all in morals and manners to which the newfangled doctrine of utility pretended
These discourses which I continued for sometime had no great effect on the men but being prepared in a familiar household manner they took the fancies of the young women which was to me an assurance that the seed I had planted would in time shoot forth for I reasoned with myself that if the gudeman of the immediate generation should continue freethinkers their wives will take care that those of the next shall not lack that spunk of grace so I was cheered under that obscurity which fell upon Christianity at this time with a vista beyond in which I saw as it were the children unborn walking on the bright green and in the unclouded splendour of the faith
But what with the decay of trade and the temptation of the kings bounty and over all the witlessness that was in the spirit of man at this time the number that enlisted in the course for the year from the parish was prodigious In one week no less than three weavers and two cottonspinners went over to Ayr and took the bounty of the Royal Artillery But I could not help remarking to myself that the people were grown so used to changes and extraordinary adventures that the single enlistment of Thomas Wilson at the beginning of the American war occasioned a far greater grief and work among us than all the swarms that went off week after week in the months of November and December of this year
CHAPTER XXXVI YEAR 1795
The present Ann Dom was ushered in with an event that I had never dreaded to see in my day in our once sober and religious country parish The number of lads that had gone over to Ayr to be soldiers from among the spinners and weavers of Cayenneville had been so great that the government got note of it and sent a recruiting party to be quartered in the town for the term clachan was beginning by this time to wear out of fashion indeed the place itself was outgrowing the fitness of that title Never shall I forget the dunt that the first tap of the drum gied to my heart as I was sitting on Hansel Monday by myself at the parlour fireside Mrs Balwhidder being throng with the lassies looking out a washing and my daughter at Ayr spending a few days with her old comrades of the boarding school I thought it was the enemy and then anon the sound of the fife came shrill to the ear for the night was lown and peaceful My wife and all the lassies came flying in upon me crying all in the name of heaven what could it be by which I was obligated to put on my bigcoat and with my hat and staff go out to enquire The whole town was aloof the aged at the doors in clusters and the bairns following the tattoo as it was called and at every doubling beat of the drum shouting as if they had been in the face of their foemen
Mr Archibald Dozendale one of my elders was saying to several persons around him just as I came up Hech sirs but the battle draws near our gates upon which there was a heavy sigh from all that heard him and then they told me of the sergeants business and we had a serious communing together anent the same But while we were thus standing discoursing on the causey Mrs Balwhidder and the servant lassies could thole no longer but in a troop came in quest of me to hear what was doing In short it was a night both of sorrow and anxiety Mr Dozendale walked back to the manse with us and we had a sober tumbler of toddy together marvelling exceedingly where these fearful portents and changes would stop both of us being of opinion that the end of the world was drawing nearer and nearer
Whether it was however that the lads belonging to the place did not like to show themselves with the enlistment cockades among their acquaintance or that there was any other reason I cannot take it upon me to say but certain it is the recruiting party came no speed and in consequence were removed about the end of March
Another thing happened in this year too remarkable for me to neglect to put on record as it strangely and strikingly marked the rapid revolutions that were going on In the month of August at the time of the fair a gang of playactors came and hired Thomas Thacklans barn for their enactments They were the first of that clanjamfrey who had ever been in the parish and there was a wonderful excitement caused by the rumours concerning them Their first performance was DOUGLAS TRAGEDY and the GENTLE SHEPHERD and the general opinion was that the lad who played Norval in the play and Patie in the farce was an English lords son who had run away from his parents rather than marry an old cracket lady with a great portion But whatever truth there might be in this notion certain it is the whole pack was in a state of perfect beggary and yet for all that they not only in their parts as I was told laughed most heartily but made others do the same for I was constrained to let my daughter go to see them with some of her acquaintance and she gave me such an account of what they did that I thought I would have liked to have gotten a keek at them myself At the same time I must own this was a sinful curiosity and I stifled it to the best of my ability Among other plays that they did was one called MACBETH AND THE WITCHES which the Miss Cayennes had seen performed in London when they were there in the winter time with their father for three months seeing the world after coming from the boardingschool But it was no more like the true play of Shakespeare the poet according to their account than a duddy betheral set up to fright the sparrows from the peas is like a living gentleman The hungry players instead of behaving like guests at the royal banquet were voracious on the needful feast of bread and the strong ale that served for wine in decanters But the greatest sport of all was about a kailpot that acted the part of a caldron and which should have sunk with thunder and lightning into the earth however it did quite as well for it made its exit as Miss Virginia said by walking quietly off being pulled by a string fastened to one of its feet No scene of the play was so much applauded as this one and the actor who did the part of King Macbeth made a most polite bow of thankfulness to the audience for the approbation with which they had received the performance of the pot
We had likewise shortly after the Omnes exeunt of the players an exhibition of a different sort in the same barn This was by two English quakers and a quaker lady tanners of Kendal who had been at Ayr on some leather business where they preached but made no proselytes The travellers were all three in a whisky drawn by one of the bestordered horses as the hostler at the CrossKeys told me ever seen They came to the Inn to their dinner and meaning to stay all night sent round to let it be known that they would hold a meeting in Friend Thacklans barn but Thomas denied they were either kith or kin to him this however was their way of speaking
In the evening owing to the notice a great congregation was assembled in the barn and I myself along with Mr Archibald Dozendale went there likewise to keep the people in awe for we feared the strangers might be jeered and insulted The three were seated aloft on a high stage prepared on purpose with two mares and scaffolddeals borrowed from Mr Trowel the mason They sat long and silent but at last the spirit moved the woman and she rose and delivered a very sensible exposition of Christianity I was really surprised to hear such sound doctrine and Mr Dozendale said justly that it was more to the purpose than some that my younger brethren from Edinburgh endeavoured to teach So that those who went to laugh at the sincere simplicity of the pious quakers were rebuked by a very edifying discourse on the moral duties of a Christians life
Upon the whole however this to the best of my recollection was another unsatisfactory year In this we were doubtless brought more into the world but we had a greater variety of temptation set before us and there was still jealousy and estrangement in the dispositions of the gentry and the lower orders particularly the manufacturers I cannot say indeed that there was any increase of corruption among the rural portion of my people for their vocation calling them to work apart in the purity of the free air of heaven they were kept uncontaminated by that seditious infection which fevered the minds of the sedentary weavers and working like flatulence in the stomachs of the cottonspinners sent up into their heads a vain and diseased fume of infidel philosophy
CHAPTER XXXVII YEAR 1796
The prosperity of fortune is like the blossoms of spring or the golden hue of the evening cloud It delighteth the spirit and passeth away
In the month of February my second wife was gathered to the Lord She had been very ill for some time with an income in her side which no medicine could remove I had the best doctors in the country side to her but their skill was of no avail their opinions being that her ail was caused by an internal abscess for which physic has provided no cure Her death was to me a great sorrow for she was a most excellent wife industrious to a degree and managed every thing with so brisk a hand that nothing went wrong that she put it to With her I had grown richer than any other minister in the presbytery but above all she was the mother of my bairns which gave her a double claim upon me
I laid her by the side of my first love Betty Lanshaw my own cousin that was and I inscribed her name upon the same headstone but time had drained my poetical vein and I have not yet been able to indite an epitaph on her merits and virtues for she had an eminent share of both Her greatest fault—the best have their faults—was an overearnestness to gather gear in the doing of which I thought she sometimes sacrificed the comforts of a pleasant fireside for she was never in her element but when she was keeping the servants eident at their work But if by this she subtracted something from the quietude that was most consonant to my nature she has left cause both in bank and bond for me and her bairns to bless her great household activity
She was not long deposited in her place of rest till I had occasion to find her loss All my things were kept by her in a most perjink and excellent order but they soon fell into an amazing confusion for as she often said to me I had a turn for heedlessness insomuch that although my daughter Janet was grown up and able to keep the house I saw that it would be necessary as soon as decency would allow for me to take another wife I was moved to this chiefly by foreseeing that my daughter would in time be married and taken away from me but more on account of the servant lasses who grew out of all bounds verifying the proverb Well kens the mouse when the cats out of the house Besides this I was now far down in the vale of years and could not expect to be long without feeling some of the penalties of old age although I was still a hail and sound man It therefore behoved me to look in time for a helpmate to tend me in my approaching infirmities
Upon this important concern I reflected as I may say in the watches of the night and considering the circumstances of my situation I saw it would not do for me to look out for an overly young woman nor yet would it do for one of my ways to take an elderly maiden ladies of that sort being liable to possess strong set particularities I therefore resolved that my choice should lie among widows of a discreet age and I had a glimmer in my mind of speaking to Mrs Malcolm but when I reflected on the saintly steadiness of her character I was satisfied it would be of no use to think of her Accordingly I bent my brows and looked towards Irville which is an abundant trone for widows and other single women and I fixed my purpose on Mrs Nugent the relic of a professor in the university of Glasgow both because she was a well bred woman without any children to plea about the interest of my own two and likewise because she was held in great estimation by all who knew her as a lady of a Christian principle
It was some time in the summer however before I made up my mind to speak to her on the subject but one afternoon in the month of August I resolved to do so and with that intent walked leisurely over to Irville and after calling on the Rev Dr Dinwiddie the minister I stepped in as if by chance to Mrs Nugents I could see that she was a little surprised at my visit however she treated me with every possible civility and her servant lass bringing in the teathings in a most orderly manner as punctually as the clock was striking she invited me to sit still and drink my tea with her which I did being none displeased to get such encouragement However I said nothing that time but returned to the manse very well content with what I had observed which made me fain to repeat my visit So in the course of the week taking Janet my daughter with me we walked over in the forenoon and called at Mrs Nugents first before going to any other house and Janet saying as we came out to go to the ministers that she thought Mrs Nugent an agreeable woman I determined to knock the nail on the head without further delay
Accordingly I invited the minister and his wife to dine with us on the Thursday following and before leaving the town I made Janet while the minister and me were handling a subject as a sort of thing in common civility go to Mrs Nugent and invite her also Dr Dinwiddie was a gleg man of a jocose nature and he guessing something of what I was ettling at was very mirthful with me but I kept my own counsel till a meet season
On the Thursday the company as invited came and nothing extraordinary was seen but in cutting up and helping a hen Dr Dinwiddie put one wing on Mrs Nugents plate and the other wing on my plate and said there have been greater miracles than these two wings flying together which was a sharp joke that caused no little merriment at the expense of Mrs Nugent and me I however to show that I was none daunted laid a leg also on her plate and took another on my own saying in the words of the reverend doctor there have been greater miracles than that these two legs should lie in the same nest which was thought a very clever come off and at the same time I gave Mrs Nugent a kindly nip on her sonsy arm which was breaking the ice in as pleasant a way as could be In short before anything passed between ourselves on the subject we were set down for a trysted pair and this being the case we were married as soon as a twelvemonth and a day had passed from the death of the second Mrs Balwhidder and neither of us have had occasion to rue the bargain It is however but a piece of justice due to my second wife to say that this was not a little owing to her good management for she had left such a wellplenished house that her successor said we had nothing to do but to contribute to one anothers happiness
In this year nothing more memorable happened in the parish saving that the cottonmill dam burst about the time of the Lammas flood and the waters went forth like a deluge of destruction carrying off much victual and causing a vast of damage to the mills that are lower down the stream It was just a prodigy to see how calmly Mr Cayenne acted on that occasion for being at other times as crabbed as a wud terrier folk were afraid to tell him till he came out himself in the morning and saw the devastation at the sight of which he gave only a shrill whistle and began to laugh at the idea of the men fearing to take him the news as if he had not fortune and philosophy enough as he called it to withstand much greater misfortunes
CHAPTER XXXVIII YEAR 1797
When I have seen in my walks the irrational creatures of God the birds and the beasts governed by a kindly instinct in attendance on their young often has it come into my head that love and charity far more than reason or justice formed the tie that holds the world with all its jarring wants and woes in social dependence and obligation together and in this year a strong verification of the soundness of this notion was exemplified in the conduct of the poor haverel lassie Meg Gaffaw whose naturality on the occasion of her mothers death I have related at length in this chronicle
In the course of the summer Mr Henry Melcomb who was a nephew to Mr Cayenne came down from England to see his uncle He had just completed his education at the college of Christ Church in Oxford and was the most perfect young gentleman that had ever been seen in this part of the country
In his appearance he was a very paragon with a fine manly countenance frankhearted blithe and in many points of character very like my old friend the Lord Eaglesham who was shot Indeed in some respects he was even above his lordship for he had a great turn at ready wit and could joke and banter in a most agreeable manner He came very often to the manse to see me and took great pleasure in my company and really used a freedom that was so droll I could scarcely keep my composity and decorum with him Among others that shared in his attention was daft Meg Gaffaw whom he had forgathered with one day in coming to see me and after conversing with her for some time he handed her as she told me herself over the kirkstile like a lady of high degree and came with her to the manse door linking by the arm
From the illtimed daffin of that hour poor Meg fell deep in love with Mr Melcomb and it was just a playacting to see the arts and antics she put in practice to win his attention In her garb she had never any sense of a proper propriety but went about the country asking for shapings of silks and satins with which she patched her duds calling them by the divers names of robes and negligees All hitherto however had been moderation compared to the daffadile of vanity which she was now seen when she had searched as she said to the bottom of her coffer I cannot take it upon me to describe her but she kythed in such a variety of cuffs and ruffles feathers old gumflowers painted paper knots ribbons and furs and laces and went about gecking and simpering with an old fan in her hand that it was not in the power of nature to look at her with sobriety
Her first appearance in this masquerading was at the kirk on the Sunday following her adventure with Mr Melcomb and it was with a sore difficulty that I could keep my eyes off her even in prayer and when the kirk skailed she walked before him spreading all her grandeur to catch his eye in such a manner as had not been seen or heard of since the prank that Lady Macadam played Miss Betty Wudrife
Any other but Mr Melcomb would have been provoked by the fools folly but he humoured her wit and to the amazement of the whole people presented her his hand and allemanded her along in a manner that should not have been seen in any street out of a kings court and far less on the Lords day But alas this sport did not last long Mr Melcomb had come from England to be married to his cousin Miss Virginia Cayenne and poor daft Meg never heard of it till the banns for their purpose of marriage was read out by Mr Lorimore on the Sabbath after The words were scarcely out of his mouth when the simple and innocent natural gave a loud shriek that terrified the whole congregation and ran out of the kirk demented There was no more finery for poor Meg but she went and sat opposite to the windows of Mr Cayennes house where Mr Melcomb was with clasped hands and beseeching eyes like a monumental statue in alabaster and no entreaty could drive her away Mr Melcomb sent her money and the bride many a fine thing but Meg flung them from her and clasped her hands again and still sat Mr Cayenne would have let loose the housedog on her but was not permitted
In the evening it began to rain and they thought that and the coming darkness would drive her away but when the servants looked out before barring the doors there she was in the same posture I was to perform the marriage ceremony at seven oclock in the morning for the young pair were to go that night to Edinburgh and when I went there was Meg sitting looking at the windows with her hands clasped When she saw me she gave a shrill cry and took me by the hand and wised me to go back crying out in a heartbreaking voice O Sir No yet—no yet Hell maybe draw back and think of a far truer bride I was wae for her and very angry with the servants for laughing at the fond folly of the illless thing
When the marriage was over and the carriage at the door the bridegroom handed in the bride Poor Meg saw this and jumping up from where she sat was at his side like a spirit as he was stepping in and taking him by the hand she looked in his face so piteously that every heart was sorrowful for she could say nothing When he pulled away his hand and the door was shut she stood as if she had been charmed to the spot and saw the chaise drive away All that were about the door then spoke to her but she heard us not At last she gave a deep sigh and the water coming into her eye she said The worm—the worm is my bonny bridegroom and Jenny with the manyfeet my bridal maid The milldam waters the wine o the wedding and the clay and the clod shall be my bedding A lang night is meet for a bridal but none shall be langer than mine In saying which words she fled from among us with heels like the wind The servants pursued but long before they could stop her she was past redemption in the deepest plumb of the cottonmill dam
Few deaths had for many a day happened in the parish to cause so much sorrow as that of this poor silly creature She was a sort of household familiar among us and there was much like the inner side of wisdom in the pattern of her sayings many of which are still preserved as proverbs
CHAPTER XXXIX YEAR 1798
This was one of the heaviest years in the whole course of my ministry The spring was slow of coming and cold and wet when it did come the dibs were full the roads foul and the ground that should have been dry at the seedtime was as claggy as clay and clung to the harrow The labour of man and beast was thereby augmented and all nature being in a state of sluggish indisposition it was evident to every eye of experience that there would be a great disappointment to the hopes of the husbandman
Foreseeing this I gathered the opinion of all the most sagacious of my parishioners and consulted with them for a provision against the evil day and we spoke to Mr Cayenne on the subject for he had a talent by common in matters of mercantile management It was amazing considering his hot temper with what patience he heard the grounds of our apprehension and how he questioned and sifted the experience of the old farmers till he was thoroughly convinced that all similar seedtimes were ever followed by a short crop He then said that he would prove himself a better friend to the parish than he was thought Accordingly as he afterwards told me himself he wrote off that very night to his correspondents in America to buy for his account all the wheat and flour they could get and ship it to arrive early in the fall and he bought up likewise in countries round the Baltic great store of victual and brought in two cargoes to Irville on purpose for the parish against the time of need making for the occasion a garnel of one of the warehouses of the cottonmill
The event came to pass as had been foretold the harvest fell short and Mr Cayennes cargoes from America and the Baltic came home in due season by which he made a terrible power of money clearing thousands on thousands by post after post—making more profit as he said himself in the course of one month he believed than ever was made by any individual within the kingdom of Scotland in the course of a year—He said however that he might have made more if he had bought up the corn at home but being convinced by us that there would be a scarcity he thought it his duty as an honest man to draw from the stores and granaries of foreign countries by which he was sure he would serve his country and be abundantly rewarded In short we all reckoned him another Joseph when he opened his garnels at the cottonmill and after distributing a liberal portion to the poor and needy selling the remainder at an easy rate to the generality of the people Some of the neighbouring parishes however were angry that he would not serve them likewise and called him a wicked and extortionate forestaller but he made it plain to the meanest capacity that if he did not circumscribe his dispensation to our own bounds it would be as nothing So that although he brought a wonderful prosperity in by the cottonmill and a plenteous supply of corn in a time of famine doing more in these things for the people than all the other heritors had done from the beginning of time he was much reviled even his bounty was little esteemed by my people because he took a moderate profit on what he sold to them Perhaps however these prejudices might be partly owing to their dislike of his hasty temper at least I am willing to think so for it would grieve me if they were really ungrateful for a benefit that made the pressure of the time lie but lightly on them
The alarm of the Irish rebellion in this year was likewise another source of affliction to us for many of the gentry coming over in great straits especially ladies and their children and some of them in the hurry of their flight having but little ready money were very ill off Some four or five families came to the Cross Keys in this situation and the conduct of Mr Cayenne to them was most exemplary He remembered his own haste with his family from Virginia when the Americans rebelled and immediately on hearing of these Irish refugees he waited on them with his wife and daughter supplied them with money invited them to his house made ploys to keep up their spirits while the other gentry stood back till they knew something of the strangers
Among these destitute ladies was a Mrs Desmond and her two daughters a woman of most august presence being indeed more like one ordained to reign over a kingdom than for household purposes The Miss Desmonds were only entering their teens but they also had no ordinary stamp upon them What made this party the more particular was on account of Mr Desmond who was supposed to be a united man with the rebels and it was known his son was deep in their plots yet although this was all told to Mr Cayenne by some of the other Irish ladies who were of the loyal connexion it made no difference with him but on the contrary he acted as if he thought the Desmonds the most of all the refugees entitled to his hospitable civilities This was a wonderment to our straitlaced narrow lairds as there was not a man of such strict government principles in the whole country side as Mr Cayenne but he said he carried his political principles only to the camp and the council To the hospital and the prison said he I take those of a man— which was almost a Christian doctrine and from that declaration Mr Cayenne and me began again to draw a little more cordially together although he had still a very imperfect sense of religion which I attributed to his being born in America where even as yet I am told they have but a scanty sprinkling of grace
But before concluding this year I should tell the upshot of the visitation of the Irish although it did not take place until some time after the peace with France
In the putting down of the rebels Mr Desmond and his son made their escape to Paris where they stayed till the treaty was signed by which for several years after the return to Ireland of the grand lady and her daughters as Mrs Desmond was called by our commonalty we heard nothing of them The other refugees repaid Mr Cayenne his money with thankfulness and on their restoration to their homes could not sufficiently express their sense of his kindness But the silence and seeming ingratitude of the Desmonds vexed him and he could not abide to hear the Irish rebellion mentioned without flying into a passion against the rebels which every body knew was owing to the ill return he had received from that family However one afternoon just about half an hour before his wonted dinner hour a grand equipage with four horses and outriders stopped at his door and who was in it but Mrs Desmond and an elderly man and a young gentleman with an aspect like a lord It was her husband and son They had come from Ireland in all their state on purpose to repay with interest the money Mr Cayenne had counted so long lost and to express in person the perpetual obligation which he had conferred upon the Desmond family in all time coming The lady then told him that she had been so straitened in helping the poor ladies that it was not in her power to make repayment till Desmond as she called her husband came home and not choosing to assign the true reason lest it might cause trouble she rather submitted to be suspected of ingratitude than to an improper thing
Mr Cayenne was transported with this unexpected return and a friendship grew up between the families which was afterwards cemented into relationship by the marriage of the young Desmond with Miss Caroline Cayenne Some in the parish objected to this match Mrs Desmond being a papist but as Miss Caroline had received an episcopalian education I thought it of no consequence and married them after their family chaplain from Ireland as a young couple both by beauty and fortune well matched and deserving of all conjugal felicity
CHAPTER XL YEAR 1799
There are but two things to make me remember this year the first was the marriage of my daughter Janet with the reverend Dr Kittlewood of Swappington a match in every way commendable and on the advice of the third Mrs Balwhidder I settled a thousand pounds down and promised five hundred more at my death if I died before my spouse and a thousand at her death if she survived me which was the greatest portion ever ministers daughter had in our country side In this year likewise I advanced fifteen hundred pounds for my son in a concern in Glasgow—all was the gathering of that indefatigable engine of industry the second Mrs Balwhidder whose talents her successor said were a wonder when she considered the circumstances in which I had been left at her death and made out of a narrow stipend
The other memorable was the death of Mrs Malcolm If ever there was a saint on this earth she was surely one She had been for some time bedfast having all her days from the date of her widowhood been a tender woman but no change made any alteration on the Christian contentment of her mind She bore adversity with an honest pride she toiled in the day of penury and affliction with thankfulness for her earnings although ever so little She bent her head to the Lord in resignation when her firstborn fell in battle nor was she puffed up with vanity when her daughters were married as it was said so far above their degree though they showed it was but into their proper sphere by their demeanour after She lived to see her second son the captain rise into affluence married and with a thriving young family and she had the very great satisfaction on the last day she was able to go to church to see her youngest son the clergyman standing in my pulpit a doctor of divinity and the placed minister of a richer parish than mine Well indeed might she have said on that day Lord let thy servant depart in peace for mine eyes have seen thy salvation
For some time it had been manifest to all who saw her that her latter end was drawing nigh and therefore as I had kept up a correspondence with her daughters Mrs Macadam and Mrs Howard I wrote them a particular account of her case which brought them to the clachan They both came in their own carriages for Colonel Macadam was now a general and had succeeded to a great property by an English uncle his mothers brother and Captain Howard by the death of his father was also a man as it was said with a lords living Robert Malcolm her son the captain was in the West Indies at the time but his wife came on the first summons as did William the minister
They all arrived about four oclock in the afternoon and at seven a message came for me and Mrs Balwhidder to go over to them which we did and found the strangers seated by the heavenly patients bedside On my entering she turned her eyes towards me and said Bear witness sir that I die thankful for an extraordinary portion of temporal mercies The heart of my youth was withered like the leaf that is scared with the lightning but in my children I have received a great indemnification for the sorrows of that trial She then requested me to pray saying No let it be a thanksgiving My term is out and I have nothing more to hope or fear from the good or evil of this world But I have had much to make me grateful therefore sir return thanks for the time I have been spared for the goodness granted so long unto me and the gentle hand with which the way from this world is smoothed for my passing
There was something so sweet and consolatory in the way she said this that although it moved all present to tears they were tears without the wonted bitterness of grief Accordingly I knelt down and did as she had required and there was a great stillness while I prayed At the conclusion we looked to the bed but the spirit had in the mean time departed and there was nothing remaining but the clay tenement
It was expected by the parish considering the vast affluence of the daughters that there would have been a grand funeral and Mrs Howard thought it was necessary but her sister who had from her youth upward a superior discernment of propriety said No as my mother has lived so shall be her end Accordingly everybody of any respect in the clachan was invited to the funeral but none of the gentry saving only such as had been numbered among the acquaintance of the deceased But Mr Cayenne came unbidden saying to me that although he did not know Mrs Malcolm personally he had often heard she was an amiable woman and therefore he thought it a proper compliment to her family who were out of the parish to show in what respect she was held among us for he was a man that would take his own way and do what he thought was right heedless alike of blame or approbation
If however the funeral was plain though respectable the ladies distributed a liberal sum among the poor families but before they went away a silent token of their mothers virtue came to light which was at once a source of sorrow and pleasure Mrs Malcolm was first well provided by the Macadams afterwards the Howards settled on her an equal annuity by which she spent her latter days in great comfort Many a year before she had repaid Provost Maitland the money he sent her in the day of her utmost distress and at this period he was long dead having died of a broken heart at the time of his failure From that time his widow and her daughters had been in very straitened circumstances but unknown to all but herself and Him from whom nothing is hid Mrs Malcolm from time to time had sent them in a blank letter an occasional note to the young ladies to buy a gown After her death a bankbill for a sum of money her own savings was found in her scrutoire with a note of her own writing pinned to the same stating that the amount being more than she had needed for herself belonged of right to those who had so generously provided for her but as they were not in want of such a trifle it would be a token of respect to her memory if they would give the bill to Mrs Maitland and her daughters which was done with the most glad alacrity and in the doing of it the private kindness was brought to light
Thus ended the history of Mrs Malcolm as connected with our Parish Annals Her house was sold and is the same now inhabited by the millwright Mr Periffery and a neat house it still is for the possessor is an Englishman and the English have an uncommon taste for snod houses and trim gardens but at the time it was built there was not a better in the town though its now but of the second class Yearly we hear both from Mrs Macadam and her sister with a fivepound note from each to the poor of the parish as a token of their remembrance but they are far off and were any thing ailing me I suppose the gift will not be continued As for Captain Malcolm he has proved in many ways a friend to such of our young men as have gone to sea He has now left it off himself and settled at London where he latterly sailed from and I understand is in a great way as a shipowner These things I have thought it fitting to record and will now resume my historical narration
CHAPTER XLI YEAR 1800
The same quietude and regularity that marked the progress of the last year continued throughout the whole of this We sowed and reaped in tranquillity though the sough of distant war came heavily from a distance The cottonmill did well for the company and there was a sobriety in the minds of the spinners and weavers which showed that the crisis of their political distemperature was over— there was something more of the old prudence in mens reflections and it was plain to see that the elements of reconciliation were coming together throughout the world The conflagration of the French Revolution was indeed not extinguished but it was evidently burning out and their old reverence for the Grand Monarque was beginning to revive among them though they only called him a consul Upon the kings fast I preached on this subject and when the peace was concluded I got great credit for my foresight but there was no merit int I had only lived longer than the most of those around me and had been all my days a close observer of the signs of the times so that what was lightly called prophecy and prediction were but a probability that experience had taught me to discern
In the affairs of the parish the most remarkable generality for we had no particular catastrophe was a great death of old people in the spring Among others Miss Sabrina the school mistress paid the debt of nature but we could now better spare her than we did her predecessor for at Cayenneville there was a broken manufacturers wife an excellent teacher and a genteel and modernised woman who took the better order of children and Miss Sabrina having been long frail for she was never stout a decent and discreet carlin Mrs MCaffie the widow of a customhouse officer that was a native of the parish set up another for plainer work Her opposition Miss Sabrina did not mind but she was sorely displeased at the interloping of Mrs Pirn at Cayenneville and some said it helped to kill her—of that however I am not so certain for Dr Tanzey had told me in the winter that he thought the sharp winds in March would blow out her candle as it was burnt to the snuff accordingly she took her departure from this life on the twentyfifth day of that month after there had for some days prior been a most cold and piercing east wind
Miss Sabrina who was always an oddity and aping grandeur it was found had made a will leaving her gatherings to her favourites with all regular formality To one she bequeathed a gown to another this and a third that and to me a pair of black silk stockings I was amazed when I heard this but judge what I felt when a pair of old marrowless stockings darned in the heel and not whole enough in the legs to make a pair of mittens to Mrs Balwhidder were delivered to me by her executor Mr Caption the lawyer Saving however this kind of flummery Miss Sabrina was a harmless creature and could quote poetry in discourse more glibly than texts of Scripture—her father having spared no pains on her mind as for her body it could not be mended but that was not her fault
After her death the session held a consultation and we agreed to give the same salary that Miss Sabrina enjoyed to Mrs MCaffie which angered Mr Cayenne who thought it should have been given to the head mistress and it made him give Mrs Pirn out of his own pocket double the sum But we considered that the parish funds were for the poor of the parish and therefore it was our duty to provide for the instruction of the poor children Saving therefore those few notations I have nothing further to say concerning the topics and progress of this Ann Dom
CHAPTER XLII YEAR 1801
It is often to me very curious food for meditation that as the parish increased in population there should have been less cause for matter to record Things that in former days would have occasioned great discourse and cogitation are forgotten with the day in which they happen and there is no longer that searching into personalities which was so much in vogue during the first epoch of my ministry which I reckon the period before the American war nor has there been any such germinal changes among us as those which took place in the second epoch counting backward from the building of the cottonmill that gave rise to the town of Cayenneville But still we were not even at this era of which this Ann Dom is the beginning without occasional personality or an event that deserved to be called a germinal
Some years before I had noted among the callans at Mr Lorimores school a long soople laddie who like all bairns that grow fast and tall had but little smeddum He could not be called a dolt for he was observant and thoughtful and giving to asking sagacious questions but there was a sleepiness about him especially in the kirk and he gave as the master said but little application to his lessons so that folk thought he would turn out a sort of gauntat thedoor more mindful of meat than work He was however a good natured lad and when I was taking my solitary walks of meditation I sometimes fell in with him sitting alone on the brae by the water side and sometimes lying on the grass with his hands under his head on the sunny green knolls where Mr Cylinder the English engineer belonging to the cottonwork has built the bonny house that he calls Diryhill Cottage This was when Colin Mavis was a laddie at the school and when I spoke to him I was surprised at the discretion of his answers so that gradually I began to think and say that there was more about Colin than the neighbours knew Nothing however for many a day came out to his advantage so that his mother who was by this time a widow woman did not well know what to do with him and folk pitied her heavy handful of such a droud
Byandby however it happened that one of the young clerks at the cottonmill shattered his righthand thumb by a gun bursting and being no longer able to write was sent into the army to be an ensign which caused a vacancy in the office and through the help of Mr Cayenne I got Colin Mavis into the place where to the surprise of everybody he proved a wonderful eident and active lad and from less to more has come at the head of all the clerks and deep in the confidentials of his employers But although this was a great satisfaction to me and to the widow woman his mother it somehow was not so much so to the rest of the parish who seemed as it were angry that poor Colin had not proved himself such a dolt as they had expected and foretold
Among other ways that Colin had of spending his leisure was that of playing music on an instrument in which it was said he made a wonderful proficiency but being long and thin and of a delicate habit of body he was obligated to refrain from this recreation so he betook himself to books and from reading he began to try writing but as this was done in a corner nobody jealoused what he was about till one evening in this year he came to the manse and asked a word in private with me I thought that perhaps he had fallen in with a lass and was come to consult me anent matrimony but when we were by ourselves in my study he took out of his pocket a number of the Scots Magazine and said Sir you have been long pleased to notice me more than any other body and when I got this I could not refrain from bringing it to let you seet Ye maun ken sir that I have been long in secret given to trying my hand at rhyme and wishing to ascertain what others thought of my power in that way I sent by the post twa three verses to the Scots Magazine and they have not only inserted them but placed them in the body of the book in such a way that I kenna what to think So I looked at the Magazine and read his verses which were certainly very wellmade verses for one who had no regular education But I said to him as the Greenock magistrates said to John Wilson the author of Clyde when they stipulated with him to give up the art that poemmaking was a profane and unprofitable trade and he would do well to turn his talent to something of more solidity which he promised to do but he has since put out a book whereby he has angered all those that had foretold he would be a donaegude Thus has our parish walked sidy for sidy with all the national improvements having an author of its own and getting a literary character in the ancient and famous republic of letters
CHAPTER XLIII YEAR 1802
Experience teaches fools was the first moral apothegm that I wrote in small text when learning to write at the school and I have ever since thought it was a very sensible reflection For assuredly as year after year has flown away on the swift wings of time I have found my experience mellowing and my discernment improving by which I have in the afternoon of life been enabled to foresee what kings and nations would do by the symptoms manifested within the bounds of the society around me Therefore at the beginning of the spring in this Ann Dom I had misgivings at the heart a fluttering in my thoughts and altogether a strange uneasiness as to the stability of the peace and harmony that was supposed to be founded upon a steadfast foundation between us and the French people What my fears principally took their rise from was a sort of compliancy on the part of those in power and authority to cultivate the old relations and parts between them and the commonalty It did not appear to me that this proceeded from any known or decided event for I read the papers at this period daily but from some general dread and fear that was begotten like a vapour out of the fermentation of all sorts of opinions most people of any sagacity thinking that the state of things in France being so much of an antic poetical and playactorlike guise that it would never obtain that respect far less that reverence from the world which is necessary to the maintenance of all beneficial government The consequence of this was a great distrust between man and man and an aching restlessness among those who had their bread to bake in the world persons possessing the power to provide for their kindred forcing them as it were down the throats of those who were dependent on them in business a bitter morsel
But the pith of these remarks chiefly applies to the manufacturing concerns of the new town of Cayenneville for in the clachan we lived in the lea of the dike and were more taken up with our own natural rural affairs and the markets for victual than the craft of merchandise The only man interested in business who walked in a steady manner at his old pace though he sometimes was seen being of a spunkie temper grinding the teeth of vexation was Mr Cayenne himself
One day however he came to me at the manse Doctor says he for so he always called me I want your advice I never choose to trouble others with my private affairs but there are times when the word of an honest man may do good I need not tell you that when I declared myself a Royalist in America it was at a considerable sacrifice I have however nothing to complain of against government on that score but I think it damnd hard that those personal connexions whose interests I preserved to the detriment of my own should in my old age make such an ungrateful return By the steps I took prior to quitting America I saved the property of a great mercantile concern in London In return for that they took a share with me and for me in the cottonmill and being here on the spot as manager I have both made and saved them money I have no doubt bettered my own fortune in the mean time Would you believe it doctor they have written a letter to me saying that they wish to provide for a relation and requiring me to give up to him a portion of my share in the concern—a pretty sort of providing this at another mans expense But Ill be damnd if I do any such thing If they want to provide for their friend let them do so from themselves and not at my cost—What is your opinion
This appeared to me a very weighty concern and not being versed in mercantile dealing I did not well know what to say but I reflected for some time and then I replied As far Mr Cayenne as my observation has gone in this world I think that the giffs and the gaffs nearly balance one another and when they do not there is a moral defect on the failing side If a man long gives his labour to his employer and is paid for that labour it might be said that both are equal but I say no For its in human nature to be prompt to change and the employer having always more in his power than his servant or agent it seems to me a clear case that in the course of a number of years the master of the old servant is the obligated of the two and therefore I say in the first place in your case there is no tie or claim by which you may in a moral sense be called upon to submit to the dictates of your London correspondents but there is a reason in the nature of the thing and case by which you may ask a favour from them—So the advice I would give you would be this write an answer to their letter and tell them that you have no objection to the taking in of a new partner but you think it would be proper to revise all the copartnery especially as you have considering the manner in which you have advanced the business been of opinion that your share should be considerably enlarged
I thought Mr Cayenne would have louped out of his skin with mirth at this notion and being a prompt man he sat down at my scrutoire and answered the letter which gave him so much uneasiness No notice was taken of it for some time but in the course of a month he was informed that it was not considered expedient at that time to make any change in the company I thought the old man was gone by himself when he got this letter He came over instantly in his chariot from the cottonmill office to the manse and swore an oath by some dreadful name that I was a Solomon However I only mention this to show how experience had instructed me and as a sample of that sinister provisioning of friends that was going on in the world at this time—all owing as I do verily believe to the uncertain state of governments and national affairs
Besides these generalities I observed another thing working to effect—mankind read more and the spirit of reflection and reasoning was more awake than at any time within my remembrance Not only was there a handsome booksellers shop in Cayenneville with a London newspaper daily but magazines and reviews and other new publications
Till this year when a chaise was wanted we had to send to Irville but Mr Toddy of the CrossKeys being in at Glasgow he bought an excellent one at the secondhand a portion of the effects of a broken merchant by which from that period we had one of our own and it proved a great convenience for I who never but twice in my life before hired that kind of commodity had it thrice during the summer for a bit jaunt with Mrs Balwhidder to divers places and curiosities in the county that I had not seen before by which our ideas were greatly enlarged indeed I have always had a partiality for travelling as one of the best means of opening the faculty of the mind and giving clear and correct notions of men and things
CHAPTER XLIV YEAR 1803
During the tempestuous times that ensued from the death of the King of France by the hands of the executioner in 1793 there had been a political schism among my people that often made me very uneasy The folk belonging to the cottonmill and the muslinweavers in Cayenneville were afflicted with the itch of jacobinism but those of the village were stanch and true to king and country and some of the heritors were desirous to make volunteers of the young men of them in case of anything like the French anarchy and confusion rising on the side of the manufacturers I however set myself at that time against this for I foresaw that the French business was but a fever which would soon pass off but no man could tell the consequence of putting arms in the hands of neighbour against neighbour though it was but in the way of policy
But when Bonaparte gathered his host fornent the English coast and the government at London were in terror of their lives for an invasion all in the country saw that there was danger and I was not backward in sounding the trumpet to battle For a time however there was a diffidence among us somewhere The gentry had a distrust of the manufacturers and the farming lads were wud with impatience that those who should be their leaders would not come forth I knowing this prepared a sermon suitable to the occasion giving out from the pulpit myself the Sabbath before preaching it that it was my intent on the next Lords day to deliver a religious and political exhortation on the present posture of public affairs This drew a vast congregation of all ranks
I trow that the stoor had no peace in the stuffing of the pulpit in that day and the effect was very great and speedy for next morning the weavers and cottonmill folk held a meeting and they being skilled in the ways of committees and associating together had certain resolutions prepared by which a select few was appointed to take an enrolment of all willing in the parish to serve as volunteers in defence of their king and country and to concert with certain gentlemen named therein about the formation of a corps of which it was an understood thing the said gentlemen were to be the officers The whole of this business was managed with the height of discretion and the weavers and spinners and farming lads vied with one another who should be first on the list But that which the most surprised me was the wonderful sagacity of the committee in naming the gentlemen that should be the officers I could not have made a better choice myself for they were the best built the best bred and the best natured in the parish In short when I saw the bravery that was in my people and the spirit of wisdom by which it was directed I said in my heart the Lord of Hosts is with us and the adversary shall not prevail
The number of valiant men which at that time placed themselves around the banners of their country was so great that the government would not accept of all who offered so like as in other parishes we were obligated to make a selection which was likewise done in a most judicious manner all men above a certain age being reserved for the defence of the parish in the day when the young might be called to England to fight the enemy
When the corps was formed and the officers named they made me their chaplain and Dr Marigold their doctor He was a little man with a big belly and was as crouse as a bantam cock but it was not thought he could do so well in field exercises on which account he was made the doctor although he had no repute in that capacity in comparison with Dr Tanzey who was not however liked being a stiffmannered man with a sharp temper
All things having come to a proper head the young ladies of the parish resolved to present the corps with a stand of colours which they embroidered themselves and a day was fixed for the presentation of the same Never was such a day seen in Dalmailing The sun shone brightly on that scene of bravery and grandeur and far and near the country folk came flocking in and we had the regimental band of music hired from the soldiers that were in Ayr barracks The very first sound ot made the hair on my old grey head to prickle up and my blood to rise and glow as if youth was coming again into my veins
Sir Hugh Montgomerie was the commandant and he came in all the glory of war on his best horse and marched at the head of the men to the greenhead The doctor and me were the rearguard not being able on account of my age and his fatness to walk so fast as the quickstep of the corps On the field we took our place in front near Sir Hugh and the ladies with the colours and after some salutations according to the fashion of the army Sir Hugh made a speech to the men and then Miss Maria Montgomerie came forward with her sister Miss Eliza and the other ladies and the banners were unfurled all glittering with gold and the kings arms in needlework Miss Maria then made a speech which she had got by heart but she was so agitated that it was said she forgot the best part of it however it was very well considering When this was done I then stepped forward and laying my hat on the ground every man and boy taking off theirs I said a prayer which I had conned most carefully and which I thought the most suitable I could devise in unison with Christian principles which are averse to the shedding of blood and I particularly dwelt upon some of the specialities of our situation
When I had concluded the volunteers gave three great shouts and the multitude answered them to the same tune and all the instruments of music sounded making such a bruit as could not be surpassed for grandeur—a long and very circumstantial account of all which may be read in the newspapers of that time
The volunteers at the word of command then showed us the way they were to fight with the French in the doing of which a sad disaster happened for when they were charging bayonets they came towards us like a flood and all the spectators ran and I ran and the doctor ran but being laden with his belly he could not run fast enough so he lay down and being just before me at the time I tumbled over him and such a shout of laughter shook the field as was never heard
When the fatigues of the day were at an end we marched to the cottonmill where in one of the warehouses a vast table was spread and a dinner prepared at Mr Cayennes own expense sent in from the CrossKeys and the whole corps with many of the gentry of the neighbourhood dined with great jollity the band of music playing beautiful airs all the time At night there was a universal dance gentle and semple mingled together All which made it plain to me that the Lord by this unison of spirit had decreed our national preservation but I kept this in my own breast lest it might have the effect to relax the vigilance of the kingdom And I should note that Colin Mavis the poetical lad of whom I have spoken in another part made a song for this occasion that was very mightily thought of having in it a nerve of valiant genius that kindled the very souls of those that heard it
CHAPTER XLV YEAR 1804
In conformity with the altered fashions of the age in this year the session came to an understanding with me that we should not inflict the common church censures for such as made themselves liable thereto but we did not formally promulge our resolution as to this wishing as long as possible to keep the deterring rod over the heads of the young and thoughtless Our motive on the one hand was the disregard of the manufacturers in Cayenneville who were without the breach of truth an irreligious people and on the other a desire to preserve the ancient and wholesome admonitory and censorian jurisdiction of the minister and elders We therefore laid it down as a rule to ourselves that in the case of transgressions on the part of the inhabitants of the new district of Cayenneville we should subject them rigorously to a fine but that for the farminglads we would put it in their option to pay the fine or stand in the kirk
We conformed also in another matter to the times by consenting to baptize occasionally in private houses Hitherto it had been a strict rule with me only to baptize from the pulpit Other parishes however had long been in the practice of this relaxation of ancient discipline
But all this on my part was not done without compunction of spirit for I was of opinion that the principle of Presbyterian integrity should have been maintained to the uttermost Seeing however the elders set on an alteration I distrusted my own judgment and yielded myself to the considerations that weighed with them for they were true men and of a godly honesty and took the part of the poor in all contentions with the heritors often to the hazard and damage of their own temporal welfare
I have now to note a curious thing not on account of its importance but to show to what lengths a correspondence had been opened in the parish with the farthest parts of the earth Mr Cayenne got a turtlefish sent to him from a Glasgow merchant and it was living when it came to the Wheatrig House and was one of the most remarkable beasts that had ever been seen in our country side It weighed as much as a wellfed calf and had three kinds of meat in its body fish flesh and fowl and it had four waterwings for they could not be properly called fins but what was little short of a miracle about the creature happened after the head was cutted off when if a finger was offered to it it would open its mouth and snap at it and all this after the carcass was divided for dressing
Mr Cayenne made a feast on the occasion to many of the neighbouring gentry to the which I was invited and we drank limepunch as we ate the turtle which as I understand is the fashion in practice among the Glasgow West Indy merchants who are famed as great hands with turtles and limepunch But it is a sort of food that I should not like to fare long upon I was not right the next day and I have heard it said that when eaten too often it has a tendency to harden the heart and make it crave for greater luxuries
But the story of the turtle is nothing to that of the Mass which with all its mummeries and abominations was brought into Cayenneville by an Irish priest of the name of Father OGrady who was confessor to some of the poor deluded Irish labourers about the new houses and the cottonmill How he had the impudence to set up that memento of Satan the crucifix within my parish and jurisdiction was what I never could get to the bottom of but the soul was shaken within me when on the Monday after one of the elders came to the manse and told me that the old dragon of Popery with its seven heads and ten horns had been triumphing in Cayenneville on the foregoing Lords day I lost no time in convening the session to see what was to be done much however to my surprise the elders recommended no step to be taken but only a zealous endeavour to greater Christian excellence on our part by which we should put the beast and his worshippers to shame and flight I am free to confess that at the time I did not think this the wisest counsel which they might have given for in the heat of my alarm I was for attacking the enemy in his camp But they prudently observed that the days of religious persecution were past and it was a comfort to see mankind cherishing any sense of religion at all after the vehement infidelity that had been sent abroad by the French Republicans and to this opinion now that I have had years to sift its wisdom I own myself a convert and proselyte
Fortunately however for my peace of mind there proved to be but five Roman Catholics in Cayenneville and Father OGrady not being able to make a living there packed up his Virgin Marys saints and painted Agneses in a portmanteau and went off in the Ayr fly one morning for Glasgow where I hear he has since met with all the encouragement that might be expected from the ignorant and idolatrous inhabitants of that great city
Scarcely were we well rid of Father OGrady when another interloper entered the parish He was more dangerous in the opinion of the session than even the Pope of Rome himself for he came to teach the flagrant heresy of Universal Redemption a most consolatory doctrine to the sinner that is loth to repent and who loves to troll his iniquity like a sweet morsel under his tongue Mr Martin Siftwell who was the last taen on elder and who had received a liberal and judicious education and was moreover naturally possessed of a quick penetration observed in speaking of this new doctrine that the grossest papist sinner might have some qualms of fear after he had bought the Popes pardon and might thereby be led to a reformation of life but that the doctrine of universal redemption was a bribe to commit sin the wickedest mortal according to it being only liable to a few thousand years more or less of suffering which compared with eternity was but a momentary pang like having a tooth drawn for the toothache Mr Siftwell is a shrewd and clearseeing man in points of theology and I would trust a great deal to what he says as I have not at my advanced age such a mind for the kittle crudities of polemical investigation that I had in my younger years especially when I was a student in the Divinity Hall of Glasgow
It will be seen from all I have herein recorded that in the course of this year there was a general resuscitation of religious sentiments for what happened in my parish was but a type and index to the rest of the world We had however one memorable that must stand by itself for although neither death nor bloodshed happened yet was it cause of the fear of both
A rumour reached us from the Clyde that a French manofwar had appeared in a Highland loch and that all the Greenock volunteers had embarked in merchant vessels to bring her in for a prize Our volunteers were just jumping and yowling like chained dogs to be at her too but the colonel Sir Hugh would do nothing without orders from his superiors Mr Cayenne though an aged man above seventy was as bold as a lion and came forth in the old garb of an American huntsman like as I was told a Robin Hood in the play is and it was just a sport to see him feckless man trying to march so crousely with his lean shaking hands But the whole affair proved a false alarm and our men when they heard it were as well pleased that they had been constrained to sleep in their warm beds at home instead of lying on coils of cables like the gallant Greenock sharpshooters
CHAPTER XLVI YEAR 1805
For some time I had meditated a reformation in the parish and this year I carried the same into effect I had often noticed with concern that out of a mistaken notion of paying respect to the dead my people were wont to go to great lengths at their burials and dealt round shortbread and sugarbiscuit with wine and other confections as if there had been no had in their hands which straitened many a poor family making the dispensation of the Lord a heavier temporal calamity than it should naturally have been Accordingly on consulting with Mrs Balwhidder who has a most judicious judgment it was thought that my interference would go a great way to lighten the evil I therefore advised with those whose friends were taken from them not to make that amplitude of preparation which used to be the fashion nor to continue handing about as long as the folk would take but only at the very most to go no more than three times round with the service Objections were made to this as if it would be thought mean but I put on a stern visage and told them that if they did more I would rise up and rebuke and forbid the extravagance So three services became the uttermost modicum at all burials This was doing much but it was not all that I wished to do
I considered that the best reformations are those which proceed step by step and stop at that point where the consent to what has been established becomes general and so I governed myself and therefore interfered no farther but I was determined to set an example Accordingly at the very next dregy after I partook of one service I made a bow to the servitors and they passed on but all before me had partaken of the second service some however of those after me did as I did so I foresaw that in a quiet canny way I would bring in the fashion of being satisfied with one service I therefore from that time always took my place as near as possible to the door where the chief mourner sat and made a point of nodding away the second service which has now grown into a custom to the great advantage of surviving relations
But in this reforming business I was not altogether pleased with our poet for he took a pawkie view of my endeavours and indited a ballad on the subject in the which he makes a clattering carlin describe what took place so as to turn a very solemn matter into a kind of derision When he brought his verse and read it to me I told him that I thought it was overly natural for I could not find another term to designate the cause of the dissatisfaction that I had with it but Mrs Balwhidder said that it might help my plan if it were made public so upon her advice we got some of Mr Lorimores best writers to make copies of it for distribution which was not without fruit and influence But a sore thing happened at the very next burial As soon as the nodding away of the second service began I could see that the gravity of the whole meeting was discomposed and some of the irreverent young chiels almost broke out into evendown laughter which vexed me exceedingly Mrs Balwhidder howsoever comforted me by saying that custom in time would make it familiar and byandby the thing would pass as a matter of course until one service would be all that folk would offer and truly the thing is coming to that for only two services are now handed round and the second is regularly nodded by
CHAPTER XLVII YEAR 1806
Mr Cayenne of Wheatrig having for several years been in a declining way partly brought on by the consuming fire of his furious passion and partly by the decay of old age sent for me on the evening of the first Sabbath of March in this year I was surprised at the message and went to the Wheatrig House directly where by the lights in the windows as I gaed up through the policy to the door I saw something extraordinary was going on Sambo the blackamoor servant opened the door and without speaking shook his head for it was an affectionate creature and as fond of his master as if he had been his own father By this sign I guessed that the old gentleman was thought to be drawing near his latter end so I walked softly after Sambo up the stair and was shown into the chamber where Mr Cayenne since he had been confined to the house usually sat His wife had been dead some years before
Mr Cayenne was sitting in his easy chair with a white cotton nightcap on his head and a pillow at his shoulders to keep him straight But his head had fallen down on his breast and he breathed like a panting baby His legs were swelled and his feet rested on a footstool His face which was wont to be the colour of a peony rose was of a yellow hue with a patch of red on each cheek like a wafer and his nose was shirpit and sharp and of an unnatural purple Death was evidently fighting with nature for the possession of the body Heaven have mercy on his soul said I to myself as I sat down beside him
When I had been seated some time the power was given him to raise his head as it were ajee and he looked at me with the tail of his eye which I saw was glittering and glassy Doctor for he always called me doctor though I am not of that degree I am glad to see you were his words uttered with some difficulty
How do you find yourself sir I replied in a sympathising manner
Damned bad said he as if I had been the cause of his suffering I was daunted to the very heart to hear him in such an unregenerate state but after a short pause I addressed myself to him again saying that I hoped he would soon be more at ease and he should bear in mind that the Lord chasteneth whom he loveth
The devil take such love was his awful answer which was to me as a blow on the forehead with a mell However I was resolved to do my duty to the miserable sinner let him say what he would Accordingly I stooped towards him with my hands on my knees and said in a compassionate voice Its very true sir that you are in great agony but the goodness of God is without bound
Curse me if I think so doctor replied the dying uncircumcised Philistine But he added at whiles his breathlessness being grievous and often broken by a sore hiccup I am however no saint as you know doctor so I wish you to put in a word for me doctor for you know that in these times doctor it is the duty of every good subject to die a Christian
This was a poor account of the state of his soul but it was plain I could make no better ot by entering into any religious discourse or controversy with him he being then in the last gasp so I knelt down and prayed for him with great sincerity imploring the Lord as an awakening sense of grace to the dying man that it would please him to lift up though it were but for the season of a minute the chastening hand which was laid so heavily upon his aged servant at which Mr Cayenne as if indeed the hand had been then lifted cried out None of that stuff doctor you know that I cannot call myself his servant
Was ever a minister in his prayer so broken in upon by a perishing sinner However I had the weight of a duty upon me and made no reply but continued Thou hearest O Lord how he confesses his unworthiness Let not thy compassion therefore be withheld but verify to him the words that I have spoken in faith of the boundlessness of thy goodness and the infinite multitude of thy tender mercies I then calmly but sadly sat down and presently as if my prayer had been heard relief was granted for Mr Cayenne raised his head and giving me a queer look said That last clause of your petition doctor was well put and I think too it has been granted for I am easier—adding I have no doubt doctor given much offence in the world and oftenest when I meant to do good but I have wilfully injured no man and as God is my judge and his goodness you say is so great he may perhaps take my soul into his holy keeping In saying which words Mr Cayenne dropped his head upon his breast his breathing ceased and he was wafted away out of this world with as little trouble as a blameless baby
This event soon led to a change among us In the settling of Mr Cayennes affairs in the Cottonmill Company it was found that he had left such a power of money that it was needful to the concern in order that they might settle with the doers under his testament to take in other partners By this Mr Speckle came to be a resident in the parish he having taken up a portion of Mr Cayennes share He likewise took a tack of the house and policy of Wheatrig But although Mr Speckle was a far more conversible man than his predecessor and had a wonderful plausibility in business the affairs of the company did not thrive in his hands Some said this was owing to his having owre many irons in the fire others to the circumstances of the times in my judgment however both helped but the issue belongs to the events of another year In the meanwhile I should here note that in the course of this current Ann Dom it pleased Heaven to visit me with a severe trial the nature of which I will here record at length—the upshot I will make known hereafter
From the planting of inhabitants in the cottonmill town of Cayenneville or as the country folk not used to used to such lang nebbit words now call it Canaille there had come in upon the parish various sectarians among the weavers some of whom were not satisfied with the gospel as I preached it and endeavoured to practise it in my walk and conversation and they began to speak of building a kirk for themselves and of getting a minster that would give them the gospel more to their own ignorant fancies I was exceedingly wroth and disturbed when the thing was first mentioned to me and I very earnestly from the pulpit next Lords day lectured on the growth of newfangled doctrines which however instead of having the wonted effect of my discourses set up the theological weavers in a bleeze and the very Monday following they named a committee to raise money by subscription to build a meetinghouse This was the first overt act of insubordination collectively manifested in the parish and it was conducted with all that crafty dexterity with which the infidel and jacobin spirit of the French Revolution had corrupted the honest simplicity of our good old hameward fashions In the course of a very short time the Canaille folk had raised a large sum and seduced not a few of my people into their schism by which they were enabled to set about building their kirk the foundations thereof were not however laid till the following year but their proceedings gave me a het heart for they were like an open rebellion to my authority and a contemptuous disregard of that religious allegiance which is due from the flock to the pastor
On Christmasday the wind broke off the main arm of our Adam and Eve peartree and I grieved for it more as a type and sign of the threatened partition than on account of the damage though the fruit was the juiciest in all the country side
CHAPTER XLVIII YEAR 1807
This was a year to me of satisfaction in many points for a greater number of my younger flock married in it than had done for any one of ten years prior They were chiefly the offspring of the marriages that took place at the close of the American war and I was pleased to see the duplification of welldoing as I think marrying is having always considered the command to increase and multiply a holy ordinance which the circumstances of this world but too often interfere to prevent
It was also made manifest to me that in this year there was a very general renewal in the hearts of men of a sense of the utility even in earthly affairs of a religious life in some I trust it was more than prudence and really a birth of grace Whether this was owing to the upshot of the French Revolution all men being pretty well satisfied in their minds that uproar and rebellion make but an ill way of righting wrongs or that the swarm of unruly youth the offspring as I have said of the marriages after the American war had grown sobered from their follies and saw things in a better light I cannot take upon me to say But it was very edifying to me their minister to see several lads who had been both wild and free in their principles marrying with sobriety and taking their wives to the kirk with the comely decorum of heads of families
But I was now growing old and could go seldomer out among my people than in former days so that I was less a partaker of their ploys and banquets either at birth bridal or burial I heard however all that went on at them and I made it a rule after giving the blessing at the end of the ceremony to admonish the bride and bridegroom to ca canny and join trembling with their mirth It behoved me on one occasion however to break through a rule that age and frailty had imposed upon me and to go to the wedding of Tibby Banes the daughter of the betheral because she had once been a servant in the manse besides the obligation upon me from her fathers part both in the kirk and kirkyard Mrs Balwhidder went with me for she liked to countenance the pleasantries of my people and over and above all it was a paywedding in order to set up the bridegroom in a shop
There was to be sure a great multitude gentle and semple of all denominations with two fiddles and a bass and the volunteers fife and drum and the jollity that went on was a perfect feast of itself though the weddingsupper was a prodigy of abundance The auld carles kecklet with fainness as they saw the young dancers and the carlins sat on forms as mim as May puddocks with their shawls pinned apart to show their muslin napkins But after supper when they had got a glass of the punch their heels showed their mettle and grannies danced with their oyes holding out their hands as if they had been spinning with two rocks I told Colin Mavis the poet than an INFARE was a fine subject for his muse and soon after he indited an excellent ballad under that title which he projects to publish with other ditties by subscription and I have no doubt a liberal and discerning public will give him all manner of encouragement for that is the food of talent of every kind and without cheering no one can say what an authors faculty naturally is
CHAPTER XLIX YEAR 1808
Through all the wars that have raged from the time of the Kings accession to the throne there has been a gradually coming nearer and nearer to our gates which is a very alarming thing to think of In the first at the time he came to the crown we suffered nothing Not one belonging to the parish was engaged in the battles thereof and the news of victories before they reached us which was generally by word of mouth were old tales In the American war as I have related at length we had an immediate participation but those that suffered were only a few individuals and the evil was done at a distance and reached us not until the worst of its effects were spent And during the first term of the present just and necessary contest for all that is dear to us as a people although by the offswarming of some of our restless youth we had our part and portion in common with the rest of the Christian world yet still there was at home a great augmentation of prosperity and every thing had thriven in a surprising manner somewhat however to the detriment of our country simplicity By the building of the cottonmill and the rising up of the new town of Cayenneville we had intromitted so much with concerns of trade that we were become a part of the great web of commercial reciprocities and felt in our corner and extremity every touch or stir that was made on any part of the texture The consequence of this I have now to relate
Various rumours had been floating about the business of the cotton manufacturers not being so lucrative as it had been and Bonaparte as it is well known was a perfect limb of Satan against our prosperity having recourse to the most wicked means and purposes to bring ruin upon us as a nation His cantrips in this year began to have a dreadful effect
For some time it had been observed in the parish that Mr Specle of the cottonmill went very often to Glasgow and was sometimes off at a few minutes warning to London and the neighbours began to guess and wonder at what could be the cause of all this running here and riding there as if the littlegude was at his heels Sober folk augured ill ot and it was remarked likewise that there was a haste and confusion in his mind which betokened a foretaste of some change of fortune At last in the fulness of time the babe was born
On a Saturday night Mr Speckle came out late from Glasgow on the Sabbath he was with all his family at the kirk looking as a man that had changed his way of life and on the Monday when the spinners went to the mill they were told that the company had stopped payment Never did a thunderclap daunt the heart like this news for the bread in a moment was snatched from more than a thousand mouths It was a scene not to be described to see the cottonspinners and the weavers with their wives and children standing in bands along the road all looking and speaking as if they had lost a dear friend or parent For my part I could not bear the sight but hid myself in my closet and prayed to the Lord to mitigate a calamity which seemed to me past the capacity of man to remedy for what could our parish fund do in the way of helping a whole town thus suddenly thrown out of bread
In the evening however I was strengthened and convened the elders at the manse to consult with them on what was best to be done for it was well known that the sufferers had made no provision for a sore foot But all our gathered judgments could determine nothing and therefore we resolved to wait the issue not doubting but that He who sends the night would bring the day in His good and gracious time which so fell out Some of them who had the largest experience of such vicissitudes immediately began to pack up their ends and their awls and to hie them into Glasgow and Paisley in quest of employ but those who trusted to the hopes that Mr Speckle himself still cherished lingered long and were obligated to submit to sore distress After a time however it was found that the company was ruined and the mill being sold for the benefit of the creditors it was bought by another Glasgow company who by getting a good bargain and managing well have it still and have made it again a blessing to the country At the time of the stoppage however we saw that commercial prosperity flush as it might be was but a perishable commodity and from thence both by public discourse and private exhortation I have recommended to the workmen to lay up something for a reverse and showed that by doing with their bawbees and pennies what the great do with their pounds they might in time get a pose to help them in the day of need This advice they have followed and made up a Savings Bank which is a pillow of comfort to many an industrious head of a family
But I should not close this account of the disaster that befell Mr Speckle and the cottonmill company without relating a very melancholy case that was the consequence Among the overseers there was a Mr Dwining an Englishman from Manchester where he had seen better days having had himself there of his own property once as large a mill according to report as the Cayenneville mill He was certainly a man above the common and his wife was a lady in every point but they held themselves by themselves and shunned all manner of civility giving up their whole attention to their two little boys who were really like creatures of a better race than the callans of our clachan
On the failure of the company Mr Dwining was observed by those who were present to be particularly distressed his salary being his all but he said little and went thoughtfully home Some days after he was seen walking by himself with a pale face a heavy eye and slow step—all tokens of a sorrowful heart Soon after he was missed altogether nobody saw him The door of his house was however open and his two pretty boys were as lively as usual on the green before the door I happened to pass when they were there and I asked them how their father and mother were They said they were still in bed and would not waken and the innocent lambs took me by the hand to make me waken their parents I know not what was in it but I trembled from head to foot and I was led in by the babies as if I had not the power to resist Never shall I forget what I saw in that bed
I found a letter on the table and I came away locking the door behind me and took the lovely prattling orphans home I could but shake my head and weep as I gave them to the care of Mrs Balwhidder and she was terrified but said nothing I then read the letter It was to send the bairns to a gentleman their uncle in London Oh it is a terrible tale but the windingsheet and the earth is over it I sent for two of my elders I related what I had seen Two coffins were got and the bodies laid in them and the next day with one of the fatherless bairns in each hand I followed them to the grave which was dug in that part of the kirkyard where unchristened babies are laid We durst not take it upon us to do more but few knew the reason and some thought it was because the deceased were strangers and had no regular lair
I dressed the two bonny orphans in the best mourning at my own cost and kept them in the manse till we could get an answer from their uncle to whom I sent their fathers letter It stung him to the quick and he came down all the way from London and took the children away himself Oh he was a vexed man when the beautiful bairns on being told he was their uncle ran into his arms and complained that their papa and mamma had slept so long that they would never waken
CHAPTER L YEAR 1809
As I come towards the events of these latter days I am surprised to find myself not at all so distinct in my recollection of them as in those of the first of my ministry being apt to confound the things of one occasion with those of another which Mrs Balwhidder says is an admonishment to me to leave off my writing But please God I will endeavour to fulfil this as I have through life tried to the best of my capacity to do every other duty and with the help of Mrs Balwhidder who has a very clear understanding I think I may get through my task in a creditable manner which is all I aspire after not writing for a vain world but only to testify to posterity anent the great changes that have happened in my day and generation—a period which all the bestinformed writers say has not had its match in the history of the world since the beginning of time
By the failure of the cottonmill company whose affairs were not settled till the spring of this year there was great suffering during the winter but my people those that still adhered to the establishment bore their share of the dispensation with meekness and patience nor was there wanting edifying monuments of resignation even among the stravaigers
On the day that the Canaille Meetinghouse was opened which was in the summer I was smitten to the heart to see the empty seats that were in my kirk for all the thoughtless and some that I had a better opinion of went to hear the opening discourse Satan that day had power given to him to buffet me as he did Job of old and when I looked around and saw the empty seats my corruption rose and I forgot myself in the remembering prayer for when I prayed for all denominations of Christians and worshippers and infidels I could not speak of the schismatics with patience but entreated the Lord to do with the hobleshow at Cayenneville as he saw meet in his displeasure the which when I came afterwards to think upon I grieved at with a sore contrition
In the course of the week following the elders in a body came to me in the manse and after much commendation of my godly ministry they said that seeing I was now growing old they thought they could not testify their respect for me in a better manner than by agreeing to get me a helper But I would not at that time listen to such a proposal for I felt no falling off in my powers of preaching on the contrary I found myself growing better at it as I was enabled to hold forth in an easy manner often a whole half hour longer than I could do a dozen years before Therefore nothing was done in this year anent my resignation but during the winter Mrs Balwhidder was often grieved in the bad weather that I should preach and in short so worked upon my affections that I began to think it was fitting for me to comply with the advice of my friends Accordingly in the course of the winter the elders began to cast about for a helper and during the bleak weather in the ensuing spring several young men spared me from the necessity of preaching But this relates to the concerns of the next and last year of my ministry So I will now proceed to give an account of it very thankful that I have been permitted in unmolested tranquillity to bring my history to such a point
CHAPTER LI YEAR 1810
My tasks are all near a close and in writing this final record of my ministry the very sound of my pen admonishes me that my life is a burden on the back of flying Time that he will soon be obliged to lay down in his great storehouse—the grave Old age has indeed long warned me to prepare for rest and the darkened windows of my sight show that the night is coming on while deafness like a door fast barred has shut out all the pleasant sounds of this world and inclosed me as it were in a prison even from the voices of my friends
I have lived longer than the common lot of man and I have seen in my time many mutations and turnings and ups and downs notwithstanding the great spread that has been in our national prosperity I have beheld them that were flourishing like the green baytrees made desolate and their branches scattered But in my own estate I have had a large and liberal experience of goodness
At the beginning of my ministry I was reviled and rejected but my honest endeavours to prove a faithful shepherd were blessed from on high and rewarded with the affection of my flock Perhaps in the vanity of doting old age I thought in this there was a merit due to myself which made the Lord to send the chastisement of the Canaille schism among my people for I was then wroth without judgment and by my heat hastened into an open division the flaw that a more considerate manner might have healed But I confess my fault and submit my cheek to the smiter and now I see that the finger of Wisdom was in that probation and it was far better that the weavers meddled with the things of God which they could not change than with those of the King which they could only harm In that matter however I was like our gracious monarch in the American war for though I thereby lost the pastoral allegiance of a portion of my people in like manner as he did of his American subjects yet after the separation I was enabled so to deport myself that they showed me many voluntary testimonies of affectionate respect and which it would be a vain glory in me to rehearse here One thing I must record because it is as much to their honour as it is to mine
When it was known that I was to preach my last sermon every one of those who had been my hearers and who had seceded to the Canaille meeting made it a point that day to be in the parish kirk and to stand in the crowd that made a lane of reverence for me to pass from the kirkdoor to the backyett of the manse And shortly after a deputation of all their brethren with their minister at their head came to me one morning and presented to me a server of silver in token as they were pleased to say of their esteem for my blameless life and the charity that I had practised towards the poor of all sects in the neighbourhood which is set forth in a wellpenned inscription written by a weaver lad that works for his daily bread Such a thing would have been a prodigy at the beginning of my ministry but the progress of booklearning and education has been wonderful since and with it has come a spirit of greater liberality than the world knew before bringing men of adverse principles and doctrines into a more humane communion with each other showing that its by the mollifying influence of knowledge the time will come to pass when the tiger of papistry shall lie down with the lamb of reformation and the vultures of prelacy be as harmless as the presbyterian doves when the independent the anabaptist and every other order and denomination of Christians not forgetting even those poor wee wrens of the Lord the burghers and antiburghers who will pick from the hand of patronage and dread no snare
On the next Sunday after my farewell discourse I took the arm of Mrs Balwhidder and with my cane in my hand walked to our own pew where I sat some time but owing to my deafness not being able to hear I have not since gone back to the church But my people are fond of having their weans still christened by me and the young folk such as are of a serious turn come to be married at my hands believing as they say that there is something good in the blessing of an aged gospel minister But even this remnant of my gown I must lay aside for Mrs Balwhidder is now and then obliged to stop me in my prayers as I sometimes wander—pronouncing the baptismal blessing upon a bride and bridegroom talking as if they were already parents I am thankful however that I have been spared with a sound mind to write this book to the end but it is my last task and indeed really I have no more to say saving only to wish a blessing on all people from on high where I soon hope to be and to meet there all the old and longdeparted sheep of my flock especially the first and second Mrs Balwhidders